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JOURNAL  OF  THE  F.M.S.  MUSEUMS, 


/1/ieL/tiO  S  Ui-t^^^V^^  7HoS<2Lc)r7?5 


H( 


JOURNAL 


OF   THE 


Federated    Malay   States    Museums. 


Vol.  X 


DECEMBER,  1919  to   DECEMBER,  1922. 


Printed  for  the  F.M.S.  MUSEUMS 

BY 

KELLY    &    WALSH,     LIMITED, 

(Incorporated   in   Hongkong) 

Singapore. 
1922. 


>?V^ 


^ 


CONTENTS,"  VOL.    X. 


PART   I.— JULY,    1920. 


PAGE 


I.     On     Sea-snakes    from     the    coasts    of     the 
Malay  Peninsula,  Siam  and  Cochin-China. 
,     Malcolm  A.  Smith         . .  .  •  •  •         1 


PART    II.— DECEMBER,    1920. 

II.     On  a  collection  of  Plants  from  Peninsular 

Siam.     H.  N.  Ridley     ..  • .  . .       65 

III.  Two  new  Siamese  Plants.     H.  N.  Ridley      . .     127 

IV.  New  and  rare  Malayan  Plants.     H.  N.  Ridley     128 

PART   III.— JUNE,   1921. 

V.     Notes    on    Malaysian    Butterflies     (Part    I) 

Danainae.     J.  C.  Moulton  . .  . .     157 

VI.     The   Apple-Snails   of    the   Malay    Peninsula. 

N.  Annandale  . .  . .  •  •     193 

VII.  Two  new  Batrachians  and  a  new  Snake  from 
Borneo  and  the  Malay  Peninsula.  Malcolm 
A.  Smith         ..  ..  ..  ..197 

VIII.     Some  Water-snakes  new  to,  or  rare  in,  the 

Malay  Peninsula.     C.  Boden  Kloss  . .     201 

IX.     Nine  new  Oriental  Birds.     H.  C.  Robinson 

and  C.  Boden  Kloss      ..  ..  ..203 

X.     New  and  known  Oriental  Birds.     C.  Boden 

Kloss  ..  ..  ..  ..207 

XI.     Notes   on   some   Oriental   Birds.     C.   Boden 

Kloss  ..  ..  ..  ..214 

XIL     Seven  new  Malaysian  Mammals.     C.  Boden 

Kloss  ..  ..  ..  ..229 

XIII.  Notes    on    some    Mammals    from    Sumatra. 

E.  Jacobson    . .  . .  . .  . .     235 

XIV.  Notes  on  the  probable  climate  of  a  Mountain 

Station   in    the   Malay    States.     C.    E.   P. 
Brooke  . .  . .  241 


Contents. 
PART   IV.— DECEMBER,    1922. 


PAGE 


XV.     The  Flora  of  Klang  Gates,  Selangor.     H.  N. 

Ridley  ..  ..  ..  ..247 

XVI.  Birds  from  the  One  Fathom  Bank  Light- 
house, Straits  of  Malacca.  H.  C.  Robinson 
and  C.  Boden  Kloss      . .  . .  . .     253 

XVII.  A  list  of  Birds  collected  on  Pulau  Rumpia, 
Sembilan  Islands.  H.  C.  Robinson  and 
C.  Boden  Kloss  . .  . .  . .     255 

XVIII.  List  of  Birds  collected  on  Pulau  Jarak,  Straits 
of  Malacca.  H.  C.  Robinson  and  C.  Boden 
Kloss  ..  ..  ..  ..259 

XIX.     Three  new  Oriental  Birds.     H.  C.  Robinson 

and  C.  Boden  Kloss      . .  . .  . .     261 

XX.  On  a  collection  of  Reptiles  and  Batrachians 
from  the  Mountains  of  Pahang,  Malay 
Peninsula.     Malcolm  A.  Smith  . .  . .     263 

XXI.     A   Butterfly   new    to    the   Malay   Peninsula. 

H.  M.  Pendlebury         . .  . .  . .     283 


LIST  OF  PLATES.— VOL.  X. 
PART  I. 

I.     Sea-snakes  :   Hydrophis   lamberti,  H.   klossi   and 
H.  consobrinus. 

PART   III. 

II.     Batrachians  :  Rana  pullus    {=  R.  tasanae  nom. 
nov.)  and  Nectophryne  picturata. 

III.     Spotted   Flying-squirrel    of    Sumatra  :    Petaurista 
punctata  sumatrana. 

PART   I. 

Map  to  illustrate  the  paper  on  Sea-snakes  from  the  coasts 
of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Siam  and  Cochin-China. 


I.     ON  SEA  SNAKES  FROM  THE  COASTS  OF  THE 
MALAY  PENINSULA,  SIAM  AND  COCHIN-CHINA. 

By  Malcolm  A.  Smith,  F.Z.S. 

Plate  I  and  Map. 

INDEX. 

Hvdrus  platurus  pp.    4,35  Hvdrophis  consobrinus  pp.  20,  49 

Hvdrophis  laniberti  pp.    6, 36  H.  fasciatus  fasciatus  pp.  24, 52 

H."  godeflrovi  pp.    7, 36  H.  fasciatus  atriceps  pp.  25, 53 

H.  cvanocinctus  pp.    8,37  H.  gracilis  pp.  26, 55 

H.  inelanosoma  pp.  10,  39  H.  viperina  pp.  27,  56 

H.  brui^inansii  pp.  12,  40  H.  jerdonii  pp.  28,  51 

H.  torquatus  torquatus  pp.  13,  41  Tbalassophis  anomalus  pp.  29, 58 

H.  torquatus  aagaardi  pp.  14,  42  T.  annandalei  pp.  29,  59 

li.  torciuatus  siamensis  pp.  15,  43  Enhydrina  valakadyn  pp.  30, 60 
n.  caerulescens  caerulescens 

pp.  17,  45  Enhydris  hardwickii  pp.  32, 61 

H.  caerulescens  .thai  pp.  17,  47  Aipysurus  eydouxii  pp.  32,  63 

IT.  klossi  pp.  19, 48 

^  INTRODUCTION. 

T 

This  paper  is  based  upon  collections  made  during  the 
past  seven  years.  The  total  number  of  specimens  examined 
amounts  to  nearly  900.  In  addition  to  those  obtained  in  or 
near  the  Gull"  of  Siam,  I  have  been  permitted  Jlo  study, 
through  the  coiu'tesy  of  the  Director  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums, 
several  fine  collections  made  in  the  Straits  of  Malacca, 
chietly  olf  the  coast  of  Perak.  I  have  thus  been  able  to 
compare  large  series  of  several  different  species  from  two 
entirely  different  localities,  and  the  results  have  been  of 
great  interest. 

Most  of  the  specimens  have  been  obtained  by  native 
coUecfors,  working  in  conjunction  with  the  fisher  people. 
Nearly  all  have  been  caught  at  river  mouths,  where  the 
water  is  slightly  brackish,  either  by  visiting  the  fishing 
stakes  set  a  short  distance  out  to  sea,  at  the  time  of  the 
daily  haul,  or  by  obtaining  them  from  the  nets  or  baskets 
placed  within  the  river  mouth.  The  collections  from  Pulau 
Angsa,  oft'  the  coast  of  Selangor,  from  Bangnara,  Patani, 
from  Hua  Hin,  and  a  small  one  made  at  the  head  of  the 
Gulf  of  Siam  are  exceptions  to  this.  They  were  made  in 
purely  salt  water,  the  snakes  being  caught  while  trawling, 
or  in  an  ordinary  hand  net  as  they  lay  on  the  surface  of 
the  water. 

Other  means  than  the  above  of  obtaining  sea  snakes  are 
less  productive.  Some  species  are  attracted  by  a  light  at 
night,  and  can  be  speared  or  netted.  Enhydris  hardwickii 
I  have  often  known  caught  on  a  hook  and  line  ;  and  a 
certain  number  are  to  be  found  left  on  the  beach  by  the 
receding  tide. 


2  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Sea  snakes  can  be  conveyed  long  distances  alive  if 
attention  is  paid  to  their  method  of  transport.  They  are 
best  kept  in  a  jar  or  basket  and,  if  not  overcrowded  and 
placed  in  a  cool  spot  with  enough  water  to  keep  them 
moist,  they  will  lie  almost  motionless  and  live  for  a  week 
or  more.  In  water  they  are  continually  on  the  move, 
jostling  and  disturbing  one  another.  The  advantage  of 
obtaining  fresh  specimens,  and  of  being  able  to  prepare 
them  one's  self  is  considerable,  and  adds  greatly  to  their 
value  for  study  purposes. 

Out  of  their  native  habitat  sea  snakes  are  helpless  and 
usually  extremely  sluggish  and  unaggressive.  Although 
I  have  examined  many  hundreds  of  them  alive,  I  have 
never  seen  one  make  any  attempt  to  bite  except  under  great 
provocation.  The  fishermen  in  the  Gulf,  although  well 
aware  of  the  dangerous  nature  of  their  bite,  have  little 
dread  of  them,  and  those  that  happen  to  get  into  their  boats 
with  the  fish,  are  picked  up  by  the  tail  and  flung  back  into 
the  water. 

Judging  by  the  numbers  of  sea  snakes  that  can  be  seen 
in  the  Gulf  of  Siam  and  Straits  of  Malacca  when  travelling 
by  steamer  along  the  ordinary  trade  route,  it  isSpossible 
that  many  new  and  interesting  forms  will  be  found  -by  deep 
sea  collecting.  In  certain  localities,  when  the  sea  is  calm, 
they  may  often  be  seen  in  hundreds,  chiefly  in  the  early 
morning  and  late  afternoon,  as  they  lie  on  the  surface 
of  the  water,  apparently  to  bask  in  the  sun.  As  soon  as 
they  feel  the  wash  of  the  steamer,  they  dive  almost  vertically 
downwards  and  disappear. 

At  the  head  of  the  Gulf  where  the  coast  is  well  sheltered, 
sea  snakes  abound  ;  farther  down  the  Peninsula,  where 
it  is  exposed  to  the  full  force  of  the  N.  E.  monsoon,  they 
appear  to  be  less  numerous.  Two  sheltered  spots  are  an 
exception  to  this,  namely,  the  mouth  of  the  Inland  Sea, 
Singgora,  and  the  Bay  of  Patani. 

By  systematically  collecting  at  every  available  spot, 
it  has  been  possible  in  course  of  time  to  search  the  whole 
of  the  Gulf  very  thoroughly.  The  result  of  this  has  been 
to  bring  out  one  noteworthy  fact,  namely,  the  curiously 
local  distribution  of  many  of  the  species.  Certain  forms 
will  be  more  or  less  abundant  along  a  small  stretch  of  coast, 
at  one  or  more  river  mouths,  and  almost  or  entirely  absent 
in  other  parts  of  the  Gulf.  The  Perak  coast  collections 
shew  this  same  peculiarity,  but  as  they  have  been  made 
oyer  a  much  smaller  coast  hne,  it  is  not  so  marked.  It  is 
difficult  to  assign  a  reason  for  this  phenomenon.  The 
natural  conditions  at  the  mouths  of  these  rivers,  generally 
mud-flats,  are  apparently  identical,  so  that  it  would  not 
in  any  way  appear  to  be  governed  by  the  food  requirements 
of  these  species.  It  may  be  that  they  are  estuarinc  in  their 
habits,  and  that  when  they  get  carried  out  to  sea,  as  must 
frequently  happen,  they  perish,  either  from  want  of  suitable 
nourishment,  or  by  being  devoured  by  fish  or  other  enemies. 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  3 

Some  good  collections  made  well  away  from  the  coast 
would  be  of  value  in  helping  to  elucidate  this  interesting 
problem. 

This  eccentricity  of  distribution,  as  well  as  minor  varia- 
tions in  scalation  and  colour  which  I  have  found  confined  to 
certain  localities  only,  confirms  the  view  that  I  have  held 
for  some  time,  namely,  that  although  the  range  of  a  species 
may  be  very  great,  that  of  the  individuals  comprising  it  is 
inclined  to  be  extremely  local. 

It  follows  from  this  that  we  may  expect  to  find  among 
sea  snakes  a  considerable  number  of  geographical  forms. 
No  attempt  has  yet  been  made  to  define  races  for  any  of  the 
species,  for  the  reason  that  few  herpetologists  have  had 
sufficient  material  to  work  upon.  Yet  it  is  clear,  when  a 
good  series  can  be  obtained  from  one  locality,  and  compared 
with  a  series  from  another,  sufficiently  remote,  that 
differences  can  be  found.  In  many  cases  the  difference 
is  not  great,  and  is  confined  merely  to  slight  variation  in 
the  number  of  scales  round  the  neck  and  body.  A  few 
shew  more  distinct  changes,  not  only  in  the  number  of 
scale  rows  but  in  the  relationship  of  the  head  shields  to 
one  ani^her.  Owing  to  the  wide  variation  which  the 
indivicl'uals  of  a  species  may  exhibit  in  any  one  locality, 
large  series  are  naturally  required  before  the  range  of 
variation  of  any  particular  race  can  be  defined.  It  is 
imperative  also,  if  satisfactory  results  are  to  be  obtained, 
that  the  same  methods  of  examination  should  be  used. 
For,  according  to  the  way  in  which  the  scale  rows  and 
ventral  shields  are  counted,  so  will  the  results  differ. 

In  counting  the  body  scales  I  have  endeavoured  to  find 
the  minimum  and  the  maximum  number  of  rows.  This 
necessitates  several  counts  at  each  spot.  The  minimum 
is  upon  the  neck,  usually  from  two  to  three,  but  sometimes 
as  much  as  from  four  to  five,  heads-lengths  behind  the 
head.  The  maximum  is  at  mid-body  or  posterior  to  it. 
In  certain  forms,  such  as  Enliydris,  Thalassophis,  Hydras, 
the  maximum  is  usually  attained  by  mid-body,  but  in  most 
of  them,  and  particularly  in  (he  small  headed  forms,  it 
is  not  reached  until  well  pasi  mid-body.  The  ventrals  are 
counted  from  the  first  biluberculated  shield  that  can  be 
discovered  upon  the  neck,  and  all  missing  ones  are  allowed 
for  as  if  they  were  present. 

The  range  in  the  number  of  ventral  shields  varies 
considerably.  It  is  greatest  in  that  group  of  species  which 
are  at  present  defined  under  "  head  very  small,  body  very 
long  and  slender  anteriorly."  It  will  be  seen  however,  upon 
inspection  of  the  tables  given,  that  while  the  range  of  the 
majority  in  a  series  is  comparatively  limited,  a  few  indivi- 
duals at  cither  end  string  it  out  and  add  greatly  to  its 
number.  It  is  disturbing,  after  having  examined  a  large 
series,  and  obtained  what  appears  to  be  the  range  of  varia- 
tion of  these  shields,  to  find  another  example  which  upsets 
one's  figures  to  the  extent  of  twenty,  thirty,  or  even  more. 
Some  specimens  in  my  collection  differ  in  this  respect  so 


4  Journal  of  the  FM.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

markedly  from  what  appears  to  be  the  normal,  that  I  have 
refrained  for  the  present  from  making  any  diagnosis  of 
them!  A  good  illustration  of  this  anomaly  will  be  found 
under  Hydrophis  viperina,  a  snake  possessing  so  many 
unique  features  that  there  can  be  no  doubt  of  its  identity. 

The  measurements  of  length  given  are  in  many  cases 
approximate  only.  It  is  impossible  with  a  specimen  coiled 
up  and  hardened  by  alcohol  to  be  exact.  Where  total 
lengths  are  concerned  a  slight  discrepancy  is  of  little  impor- 
tance, but  in  connection  with  the  sexual  variation  in  the 
length  of  the  tail,  it  is  of  considerable  value. 

A  full  list  of  all  the  specimens  examined  has  not  been 
given  in  every  case.  In  dealing  with  large  numbers  of  a 
common  form  this  has  seemed  imnecessary.  In  other 
instances  the  specimens  had  been  given  away  to  various 
Museums  before  a  register  of  them  was  undertaken. 

The  following  places  are  mentioned  as  having  been 
collected  in  : — 

In  the  Gulf  of  Siam. 

Meklong  or  Meklawng,  Tachin,  Bangpakong, 
Chantabun,  Ban  Yao, — ^fishing  villages  at  the  movi^^  of  the 
rivers  of  those  names  at  the  head  of  the  Gulf.  A  reference 
such  as  Chantabun  implies  the  mouth  of  the  Chantabun 
river,  not  Chantabun  town. 

Koh  Kong,  a  small  island  ofl'  the  coast  of  Cambodia, 
just  beyond  Siamese  territory. 

Hua  Hin,  a  fishing  village  on  the  west  side  of  the  Gulf, 
80  km.  south  of  the  mouth  of  the  Meklawng  river,  the 
nearest  fresh  water  to  this  village  being  at 

Pran,  20  km.  south. 

Chumpon,  Langsuan,  Bandon,  Singgora,  on  the  east 
coast  of  the  peninsular  portion  of  Siam. 

Bangnara  in  Patani,  and  Trengganu,  on  the  east  coast 
of  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

In  the  Straits  of  Malacca. 

Kuala  Kurau,  Kuala  Larut,  Londang,  on  the  coast  of 
Perak. 

Bagan  Datoh,  in  the  estuary  of  the  Perak  river. 

Pulau  Angsa,  8  km.  otf  the  coast  of  Selangor,  a  purely 
salt  water  islet. 

Bernam  River,  Selangor. 

Trang,  120  km.  south  of  the  island  of  Puket  (Junk 
Seylon) . 

In  Cochin  China. 

Cap  St.  Jacques,  at  the  mouth  of  the  Saigon  river. 

Preliminary  diagnoses  of  Hydrophis  lamherti,  H. 
siamensis,  H.  consobrinus  and  H.  rostralis  appeared  in 
the  Journal  of  the  Natural  History  Society  of  Siam,  ii,  p.  340 
(1917) .  Further  study  of  these  forms  in  the  light  of  addi- 
tional specimens  obtained  since  that  date,  have  obliged  me  to 
modify  considerably  the  remarks  I  made  at  that  time.     The 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  5 

types  of  all  the  species  here  described  will  be  presented 
to  the  British  Museum  of  Natural  History,  together  with  a 
selection  from  the  type  series. 

In  the  preparation  of  this  paper  I  have,  above  all,  to 
thank  Mr.  G.  A.  Boulenger,  F.R.S.,  for  the  generous  help 
by  correspondence  which  he  has  so  freely  given  me  at  all 
times. 

I  have  to  thank  also  Mr.  H.  C.  Robinson,  Director  of 
F.M.S.  Museums,  and  Mr.  C.  Boden  Kloss,  for  the  valuable 
collections  made  under  their  direction,  and  sent  to  me  from 
time  to  time. 

I  am  indebted  also  to  Dr.  Nelson  Annandale  of  the 
Indian  Mjseum,  to  Messrs.  N.  B.  Kinnear  and  W.  S.  Millard 
of  the  Bombay  Natural  History  Society,  and  Dr.  Hanitsch 
of  the  Rattles  Museum.  Singapore,  for  the  loan  of  specimens 
in  their  charge  on  various  occasions. 

Mr.  C.  L.  Groundwater  I  have  to  thank  for  his  careful 
drawings  of  the  heads  of  snakes,  and  Mr.  J.  R.  Bell  for 
the  map. 

Hydrus  platurus  (Linn.). 

^  Boulenger,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  II,  p.  267  (1896)  ;  idem,  Fauna  Malay 
Pen.,  Kept,  and  Batr.  p.  181  (1912)  ;  Stejneger,  Herpet.  Japan,  p.  439 
(1907)  ;  Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II  (8),  p.  248  (1909)  ;  idem, 
Journ.  Bombay  N.H.S.,  XXVI,  p.  808  (1919)  ;  Barbour,  Mem.  Mus. 
Gomp.  Zool.  Harvard,  XLIV,  p.  129  (Nov.  1912)  ;  N.  de  Rooij,  Rept. 
Ind.  Aust.  Archipel.,  II,  p.  224  (1917). 

Pelamudriis  platurus,  Stej.,  Proc.  U.  S.  N.  Mus.,  38,  p.  Ill, 
(May,  1910). 

Gulf  of  Siani,  20  exs.  ;  Straits  of  Malacca,  9  exs. 

This  snake  appears  to  be  a  strictly  marine  species.  All 
the  specimens  referred  to  above  were  taken  in  purely  salt 
water.  The  Gulf  series  was  caught  with  a  dip  net  while 
lying  on  the  surface  of  the  water,  and  was  taken  one 
morning  while  oH"  the  coast  between  Hua  Hin  and  Koh  Lak. 
Altogether  some  50  individuals  were  seen.  With  the 
exception  of  a  few  si)ecimens  of  the  common  Enhydris 
hardwickii,  they  were  the  only  snakes  noticed.  Although 
I  spent  the  succeedhig  week  in  cruising  down  the  same 
coast,  going  as  far  South  as  Lat.  9"  (Bandon)  for  the 
express  purpose  of  collecting  sea  snakes,  I  did  not  meet 
afterwards  w^ith  more  than  half  a  dozen  snakes  of  any  kind. 
The  weather  conditions  were  the  same  throughout. 

Colouration. —  (Gulf  series).  Black  above,  yellow  to 
dark  brow^n  on  the  sides  and  below,  the  two  colours  meeting 
in  a  clear  line  of  demarcation.  Tail  with  black  dorsal  and 
ventral  bars  ;  sometimes  with  a  few  spots  as  well.  Upper 
lip  the  same  colour  as  the  sides  of  the  body. 

Some  of  the  darker  examples  have  a  yellow  stripe 
separating  the  black  of  the  back  from  the  brown  of  the 
under  parts.  The  amount  of  black  upon  the  back 
is  variable  in  width,  occupying  from  11  to  18  scales,  but 
in  no  instance  is  it  narrow  enough  to  deserve  the  name  of 
vertebral  band.  All  of  this  series  belongs  to  Boulenger's 
vars.  D  and  E,  and  they  are  merely  variations  of  the  same 


6  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

colour  form  (bicolor),  the  yellow  merging  by  every  degree 
of  intensity  into  brown. 

(Straits  of  Malacca  series).  Two  out  of  the  nine 
examples  obtained  (Nos.  3903,  3915)  are  coloured  as 
above,  but  the  remaining  seven  are  quite  different.  They 
have  a  narrowish  black  dorsal  band  occupying  about  ten 
scales,  while  the  rest  of  the  body  is  yellow,  thickly  spotted 
with  black.  In  the  fore-part  of  the  body  the  upper  spots 
have  coalesced  to  form  a  narrow  stripe,  so  that  there  is 
alternately  a  dorsal  band,  a  narrow  yellow  stripe,  and  then 
a  black  one.  The  dorsal  band  in  the  hinder  part  of  the 
body  is  sinuous  in  out-line  or  is  broken  into  large  spots. 
Tail  thickly  spotted,  with  the  central  or  ventral  part  entirely 
black.  In  some  examples  the  whole  head  is  dark  brown  or 
black. 

I  regard  these  as  Boulenger's  form  B  (Jan's  maculata) . 
They  shew  no  tendency  whatever  to  intergrade  with  the 
previous  form. 

In  addition  to  the  difference  in  colour,  the  Straits  series 
shews  a  higher  average  number  of  scale  rows  round  the 
neck  and  body,  than  those  from  the  Gulf.  The  variatiqc 
is  as  follows  :  — 

Gulf  of  Siam. 

39  to  50  round  the  neck  ;  48  to  60  round  the  body. 

Straits  of  Malacca. 

44  to  55  round  the  neck  ;  52  to  68  round  the  body. 

The  question  of  racial  distinction  in  this  widely 
distributed  snake  is  a  complex  one.  Boulenger  describes 
seven  colour  varieties,  but  does  not  attempt  to  connect  them 
in  any  way  with  geographical  areas.  Barbour,  with  the 
additional  material  available  in  the  Harvard  College 
Museum  says  "nine  easily  distinguishable  color  phases 
may  be  recognized."  Six  of  these,  he  adds,  occur  in  and 
about  the  Bay  of  Panama. 

I  do  not  tliink  he  has  sufficiently  proved  that  his  Hydrus 
platurus  ornatus  is  entitled  to  subspecific  rank.  Its  habitat 
he  defines  as  the  East  Indian  Archipelago,  and  his  own 
specimen  (No.  938)  came  from  Singapore.  But,  as  shewn 
by  my  two  series,  we  may  expect  to  find  in  the  same 
locality  at  least  three  other  colour  forms,  namely, 
Boulenger's  B.  D.  and  E. 

Hydrophis  lamberti  Smith. 

Journ.  N.  H.  S.  Siam,  ii,  p.  340  (1917). 

Description  of  the  type. — Head  rather  large,  neck 
thick,  body  moderately  elongate.  Eye  a  little  larger  than 
its  distance  from  the  niouth  ;  rostral  considerably  broader 
than  deep,  the  portion  visible  above  equal  to  one-third  the 
length  of  the  internasal  suture  ;  frontal  once  and  a  half 
as  long  as  broad,  much  shorter  than  its  distance  from  the 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  7 

rostral  ;  one  prae-  and  two  postoculars  ;  two  superposed 
anterior  temporals  ;  eight  supralabials,  the  2nd  in  contact 
with  the  praefrontal,  3rd  and  4th  touching  the  eye  ;  three 
or  four  infralabials  in  contact  with  the  anterior  chin-shields; 
no  distinct  posterior  pair.  45  scales  round  the  neck,  55  round 
the  thickest  part  of  the  body,  *  those  anterior  feebly 
imbricate,  elongate,  with  truncated  apex,  and  feebly  keeled, 
those  posterior,  hexagonal  and  subimbricate,  with  a  short 
central  keel  ;  ventrals  distinct  throughout,  281,  bicarinate  ; 
subcaudals,  43. 

Pale  yellowish-grey  above,  whitish  below,  with  30  dark 
dorsal  rhombs  on  the  body,  tapering  to  a  point  on  the 
sides  ;  tail  with  4  bars  and  a  dark  tip.  Head  above  pale 
olivaceous. 

Dimensions.—Total  length,  860  ;  tail,  80,  depth  of 
neck,  18  ;  of  body,  42  mm. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  10  ;  palatine,  10  ; 
pterygoid,  23  or  24  ;  mandibular,  22,  (1  specimen 
examined) . 

Type. — Female,  author's  number,  1112.  Collected  at 
4J\e  mouth  of  the  Meklawng  river.  Inner  Gulf  of  Siam,  in 
Sept.,  1916. 

Variation. — By  fragmentation  of  the  upper  extremity 
of  the  3rd  supralabial  on  one  side,  it  is  prevented  from 
touching  the  eye.  There  are  no  small  scales  interposed 
between  the  infralabials. 

A  second  specimen  of  this  snake.  No.  4010,  a  juvenile, 
total  length  335  mm.,  differs  from  the  type  in  the  following 
particulars  : — Portion  of  rostral  visible  above  equal  to 
nearly  half  the  length  of  the  internasal  suture  ;  7  upper 
labials  ;  posterior  chin-shields  small,  separated  by  four 
scales  ;  302  ventrals  ;  38  dark  dorsal  rhombs. 

It  was  collected  at  Hua  Hin,  near  the  type  locality  by 
Mr.  S.  G.  Lambert,  after  whom  I  have  much  pleasure  in 
naming  it. 

This  snake  is  closely  allied  to  H.  ornatus  (Gray)  from 
which  it  differs  chiefly  in  the  greater  number  of  scale  rows 
round  the  neck  and  body. 

Hydrophis  godeffroyi  Peters. 

Hydrophis  godeffroiji,  Peters,  Mon.  Berl.  Ac,  1872,  p.  856,  p.  1, 
fig.  3. 

Distira  godeffroyi,  Boulenger,  Gat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  291  (1896). 
Disteira  godeffroyi,  Stejneger,  Herpet.  Japan,  p.  430  (1907). 

Distira  ornata,  Wall,  Mem.  As.  Soc.  Bengal,  II,  (8),  p.  234 
(1909). 

Cap  St.  Jacques,  2  exs. 

I  have  referred  these  specimens  to  H.  godeffroyi  as  they 
agree  very  well,  both  with  Boulenger's  description  of  this 

*  35  and  45  scale  rows,  as  given  in  my  preliminary  diagnosis, 
is  an  error,  and  is  lierewith  corrected. 


8  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

species  in  the  Catalogue,  and  with  Stejneger's  description 
of  his  type  from  Ishigaki  Shima.* 

Wall  has  placed  godeffroyi  under  ornatus,  and  in  this 
he  may  be  right.  The  only  reliable  character  separating 
these  two  species  appears  to  be  the  number  of  scales  round 
the  neck  and  body,  godeffroyi  having  fewer.  On  the  other 
hand,  the  only  reliable  character  upon  which  I  can  separate 
my  lamberti  from  ornatus  is  also  upon  the  number  of  scale 
rows,  lamberti  having  more.  It  is  possible  that  ornatus 
is  a  very  variable  species,  but  it  is  hardly  likely  that  the 
range  would  be  so  great  in  one  locahty.  I  have  never  yet 
seen  any  specimens  of  ornatus  from  the  Gulf,  although  they 
have  been  recorded,  but  until  I  can  fdl  in  the  large  gap 
which  separates  my  specimens  of  lamberti  from  godeffroyi, 
I  leave  all  three  as  they  stand.  The  accompanying  table 
will  shew  the  ditferences  between  them. 

Variation. — The  internasal  suture  is  three  times  as 
long  as  the  interpraefrontal  in  one  of  my  specimens,  only 
once  and  a  half  times  as  long  in  the  other.  Three  postocu- 
lars  on  one  side,  two  on  the  other,  in  each  example.  Two 
superposed  anterior  temporals,  the  lower  one  again  broken 
into  two  by  a  vertical  suture.  Seven  supralabials  in  one*, 
eight  in  the  other,  the  third  and  fourth  touching  the  eye. 
Chin-shields  subecpial,  the  posterior  pair,  and  also  partly 
the  anterior  pair,  separated  by  scales.  Four  infralabials  in 
contact  with  the  chin-shields. 

Boulenger  states  that  the  scales  on  the  posterior  part 
of  the  body  are  juxtaposed.  I  should  term  mine  feebly 
imbricate  ;  they  arc  certainly  not  juxtaposed  as  the  word 
is  meant  when  applied  to  such  species  as  H.  gracilis  or 
Enhydris  hardwickii. 

Colour. — Buffj^-white,  with  58  and  68  darkish  grey 
dorsal  bars  upon  the  body  and  tail.  Head  greyish-olive 
above,  white  below. 

Dentition.— Posterior  maxillary,  12  or  13  ;  palatine, 
8  ;  pterygoid,  25  to  27  ;  mandibular,  20,  (2  specimens 
examined) . 

Hydrophis  cyanocinctus  Daudin. 

Hijdrophis  cifanocinctus,  Bouleng.,  Cat.  Sn.,  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  294 
(1896)"  ;  idem.  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Kept,  and  Batr.,  p.  185  (1912)  ; 
Wall,  Journ.  Bombay  N.  H.  S.,  XXIII,  p.  375  (1914),  and  XXVI,  p. 
433  (1919)  ;  N.  de  Rooij,  Kept.  Ind.  Aust.  Archipel.,  II,  p.  237  (1917). 

Disteira  cijanocincta,  Stej.  Herpet.  .Japan,  p.  428  (1907). 

Distira  cuanocinta,  Wall,  (part.),  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc,  Bengal,  II, 
(8)  p.  217  (1&09). 

40  specimens.  Straits  of  Malacca,  11  ^  ,  6  $  ;  Gulf  of 
Siam,  6  s  ,7  9  ;  Cap  St.  Jacques,  Cochin  China,  6  $  ,4  9  . 

*  I  mention  type  because  the  tabulated  list  of  the  other  three 
specimens  given  is  somewhat  confusing.  The  type  has  34  scales 
round  the  neck  and  43  round  the  body,  an  increase  of  9.  But  the 
next  two  examples  have  an  increase  of  only  5  and  1  respectively, 
while  the  last  has  none  at  all,  the  count  for  this  individual  being 
33  for  both  neck  and  body.  It  looks  like  a  misprint,  but  I  have 
no  means  of  knowing. 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  9 

I  have  recently  examined  the  type  of  H.  tuberculata 
Anders.,  in  the  Indian  Museum,  and  am  in  agreement  with 
Wall  (Monograph,  p.  220)  that  it  should  be  placed  under 
cyanocincfus.     It  has  31  and  41  scale  rows  and  312  ventrals. 

My  largest  specimen,  a  female  from  the  mouth  of  the 
Tachin  river,  is  considerably  bigger  than  any  previously 
recorded.     It  measures  1885  mm.  in  total  length,  tail  135. 

Considering  that  the  type  H.  aspera  Gimther,  is  said 
to  have  come  from  Singapore,  a  noteworthy  feature  about 
most  of  the  specimens  is  the  absence  of  strong  keeling  to 
the  scales.  The  majority  are  quite  smooth  in  the  anterior 
portion  of  the  body,  faintly  keeled  on  the  dorsal  rows  in 
the  posterior  part.  One  example  only,  a  well  grown  male, 
is  very  strongly  keeled  ;  on  the  other  hand,  another  male, 
half  grown,  is  entirely  smooth  throughout. 

The  eye  is  variable  in  size  but  in  all  the  adults  is  less 
than  its  distance  to  the  mouth.  In  two  examples,  Nos.  1315, 
1318,  it  is  extremely  small. 

The  anterior  temporal  shields  shew  considerable 
variation.  Normally  there  are  two,  placed  one  above  the 
othei",  the  suture  between  them  being  horizontal.  But  the 
suture  may  be  obliquely  placed,  or  even  almost  vertical,  so 
that  the  two  shields,  instead  of  being  superposed,  are  placed 
one  behind  the  other.  Cuneiform  scales  between  the 
infralabials  are  present  in  all,  usually  a  series  after  the 
second. 

In  the  number  of  scales  round  the  neck  and  body,  the 
specimens  from  the  Straits  of  Malacca  shew  a  slightly 
liigher  variation  than  those  from  the  Gulf  of  Siam.  How 
far  they  differ,  if  at  all,  from  the  Indian  form  (type  locality 
Bengal),  can  only  be  determined  when  more  exact  data 
from  that  region  are  available. 

The  variation  (including  10  embryos),  is  as  follows  : — 
29  to  35,  usually  31  to  33,  round  the  neck. 
39  to  47,  *  usually  41  to  43,  round  the  body. 
Ventrals  292  to  377. 

Excluding  the  embryos,  the  frontal  shield  is  shorter  than 
its  distance  to  the  rostral  in  3  examples,  equal  to  its  distance 
in  10,  greater  than  in  4.  The  posterior  chin  shields  are  in 
contact  with  each  other  in  4  examples,  partly  separated  in 
12,  completely  separated  in  1. 

Compared  with  these  specimens,  the  series  from  the 
coasts  of  Siam  and  Cochin  China  shews  a  slight  reduction 
in  the  number  of  scale  rows,  although  in  other  characters, 
except  possibly  in  the  size  of  the  frontal,  it  presents  no 
differences.     It  is  as  follows  : — 


'  Wall  records  a  specimen  with  49  scales  at  the  thickest  part 
of  the  body,  but  does  not  say  from  where  it  has  come.  Journ. 
N.  H.  S.  Bombay,  XXVI,  p.  436  (1919). 


10  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

28  to  33,  usually  29  to  31,  scales  round  the  neck. 

37  to  43,  usually  39  to  43,  round  the  body. 

Ventrals,  321  to  389. 

The  frontal  shield  is  as  long  as  its  distance  to  the 
rostral  in  11  examples,  longer  than  in  12,  in  9  of  these 
being  as  long  as  its  distance  to  the  end  of  the  snout.  The 
posterior  chin  shields  are  in  contact  with  each  other  in  12 
examples,  partly  separated  in  11. 

Colour. — All  the  young  ones  taken  from  the  mother 
referred  to  below,  belong  to  Boulenger's  Var.  A  of  the 
Catalogue.  They  are  light  olivaceous  yellow,  with  from 
65  to  80  blackish  annuli,  broadest  on  the  back  and  joined 
together  by  a  strong  black  stripe  running  along  the  beUy. 
Head  black,  with  or  without  a  curved  yellow  band  across 
the  snout  behind  the  nostril,  and  continued  back  along  the 
sides  of  the  head.     Posterior  half  of  tail,  black. 

A  comparison  of  these  juveniles  with  the  other  more 
grown  individuals  in  the  series,  shows  that  the  ventral  part 
of  the  stripe  and  ventral  band  gradually  disappear  with 
age.  In  some  of  the  younger  specimens,  one-quarter 
and  one-third  grown,  these  markings  can  still  be  traced, 
but  in  the  adults  they  are  entirely  lost.  •  All  of  these  are 
best  placed  under  C  and  D,  but  between  the  two  no  dividing 
line  can  be  drawn.  From  the  handsome  individuals  with 
bold,  black  or  blue-black  dorsal  bars,  to  those  in  which 
the  bars  are  so  obscurely  marked  as  to  be  hardly 
recognizable,  every  gradation  can  be  seen.  Head  olivaceous 
or  yellowish,  sometimes  mottled  with  blackish. 

The  adult  form  with  complete  jet  black  annuli  and 
ventral  stripe  which  is  to  be  found  along  the  Coasts  of 
India,  and  which  appears  to  turn  up  again  in  the  seas 
around  Formosa  I  have  never  seen  in  this  region. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  6  or  7  ;  palatine,  7  or 
8  ;  pterygoid,  15  to  19  ;  mandibular,  15  or  16,  (7  specimens 
examined) . 

Breeding. — One  pregnant  female  with  10  fully  deve- 
loped 5'oung  was  caught  in  May  off  the  Coast  of  Perak. 

Mother. — Total  length  1690  mm.  ;  31  scales  round  the 
neck,  42  round  the  body,  ventrals  337. 

Youn^.— Total  length,  360  to  380  mm.  ;  29  to  31  scales 
round  the  neck,  39  to  41  round  the  body.  The  ventrals 
could  not  be  counted  satisfactorily. 

Two  other  gravid  females  with  their  embryos  still  in 
an  early  stage  of  development  were  obtained  in  January 
and  May  in  the  Gulf  of  Siam.  Their  broods  were  5  and  11 
respectively. 

kiiiifcjHydrophis  melanosoma  Giinther. 

Hijdrophis  melanosoma,  Giinther,  Rept.  Brit.  Ind.,  p.  367,  pi. 
XXV  (1864). 

Distira  melanosoma,  Blgr.,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  291  (1896). 

Distira  wravi,  Blgr.,  Ann.  and  Mag.  Nat.  Hist,,   (7)   V,  p    307, 
(1900). 


1920.]  Dr.  Maixolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  ii 

Distira  spiralis  (part),  Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II  (8), 
p.  212  (1909). 

Hydrophis  wrayi,  Blgr.,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Kept,  and  Batr., 
p.  185  (1912). 

15  exs.,  Kuala  Kurau,  Coast  of  Perak. 
All  the  differences  between  H.  wrayi  Blgr.,  and  H. 
melanosoma  Giinth.,  being  disposed  of  by  the  above  series, 
Mr.  Boulenger  is  in  agreement  with  me  that  his  species 
should  become  a  synonym  of  Giinther's.  The  type  of  H. 
wrayi  is  from  the  coast  of  Perak.  The  type  locality  of  H. 
melanosoma  is  unknown.  Both  forms  were  described 
from  single  examples. 

On  the  whole  my  series  is  a  very  uniform  lot,  and  shews 
remarkably  little  variation.  The  eye  in  the  adult  is  always 
shorter  than  its  distance  to  the  mouth  ;  the  frontal  is  as 
long  as  its  distance  to  the  rostral  in  two  examples,  shorter 
than  in  thirteen  ;  four  infralabials  are  in  contact  with  the 
chin-shields,  which  are  subequal  in  size  ;  the  posterior  pair 
are  in  contact  in  one  example,  partly  separated  in  eight, 
completely  separated  in  six.  Seven  supralabials  and  a 
single  anterior  temporal  occur  in  every  example. 

Boulenger  has  described  the  body  scales  of  his  specimen 
as  "  feebly  imbricate,"  while  Gunther  uses  "  distinctly 
imbricate  "  for  his.  I  should  use  the  latter  expression  for 
my  specimens.  Those  on  the  neck  and  anterior  part  of  the 
body  are  longer  than  broad,  with  obtusely  pointed  extremi- 
ties, those  on  the  posterior  part  are  more  rounded,  and  as 
broad  as  or  broader  than,  long.  The  strength  of  the 
keeling  is  variable  and  differs  with  age.  Ventrals  distinct 
throughout,  bicarinate.  Fragmentation  of  the  fourth  and 
fifth  supralabials  occurs  in  two  examples.  In  one  the 
frontals  and  praefrontals  are  fused,  and  in  another  the  sixth 
and  seventh  supralabials  are  fused  on  one  side.  In  no 
instance  do  the  praefrontals  fail  to  touch  the  supralabials. 
A  small  cuneiform  scale  is  usually  present  after  the  second 
and  third  infralabials. 

Colour. — Greenish  yellow,  the  dorsal  scales  with 
black  margins,  and  with  50  to  70  broad  black  bands,  usually 
as  broad  above  as  below,  and  about  twice  as  broad  as  their 
interspaces.  Some  of  them  are  incomplete  ventrally.  Head 
black,  uniform  or  with  a  yellowish  mottling  which  is  chiefly 
confined  to  the  snout. 

In  two  examples,  Nos.  1121  and  1122,  the  bands  narrow 
ventrally,  so  that  upon  the  belly  they  are  about  as  broad  as 
their  interspaces.  Judging  from  my  specimens,  the  coloura- 
tion of  this  snake  does  not  appear  to  undergo  much 
alteration  with  age. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  5  or  6  ;  palatine,  7  ; 
pterygoid,  11  or  12  ;  mandibular,  14  (2  specimens 
examined) . 

Wall,  in  his  Monograph,  places  both  melanosoma  and 
wrayi  under  spiralis  (brugmansi),  and  writing  again  quite 
recently  (Journ.  Bombay  Nat.  Hist.  Soc,  XXVI,  p.  431,  May, 


12  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

1919),  is  still  of  the  same  opinion.  With  a  different  scale 
formula  however,  more  strongly  imbricate  body  scales,  and 
distinctive  colouration  (practically  a  brugmansi  reversed), 
there  seems  every  reason  to  keep  these  species  separate. 

I  do  not  understand  his  remark  upon  the  following 
page  (footnote,  Journ.  p.  433) ,  where  he  also  contends  that 
melanosoma  may  have  to  be  placed  under  cyanocinctus. 

Hydrophis  brugmansii  Boie. 

Hvdropliis  brugmansii,  Bouleng.,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  P.  292  (1896)  ; 
idem.  Faun.  Malay  Pen.,  Rept.  and  Batr.,  p.  184  (1912)  ;  Wall, 
Journ.  Bombay  N.  H.  S.,  XXIII,  p.  375  (1914)  ;  N.  de  Rooi],  Rept. 
Ind.  Aust.  Archipel.,  II,  p.  233  (1917). 

Distira  spiralis,  Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II,  (8)  p.  208 
(1909). 

Hydrophis  spiralis.  Wall,  Journ.  Bombay  N.H.S.,  XXVI,  p.  430 
(1919). 

The  natural  habitat  of  this  species  appears  to  be  the 
coasts  of  India,  whence  individuals  occasionally  reach  the 
shores  of  the  Malay  Peninsula.  Cantor  obtained  a  specimen 
at  Penang  and  I  have  examined  two  more  from  the  coast 
of  Perak. 

They  agree  entirely  with  Boulenger's  description.  The 
scales  round  the  body  are  smooth  anteriorly,  and  have  a 
feeble  keel  posteriorly.  The  ventrals  are  smooth  through- 
out. One  specimen  (No.  1202)  has  no  cunieform  scales 
between  the  infralabials,  an  unusual  condition  in  this 
species. 

Colour. — Greenish-yellow  above,  the  dorsal  scales  with 
black  margins,  yellowish  or  whitish  below.  44  and  45 
narrow  black  bands  upon  the  body,  the  bands  slightly 
enlarged  dorsally  and  ventrally  in  one,  very  indistinct  across 
the  belly  in  the  other.  Head  yellowish,  posterior  half  of 
tail  black. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  7 ;  palatine,  7 ; 
pterygoid,  13  ;  mandibular,  16  (1  specimen  examined). 

Under  brugmansi  (spiralis).  Wall  has  included  some 
eight  or  nine  other  forms,  which  as  far  as  I  am  aware  are 
still  considered  distinct  by  other  herpetologists.  Only  two 
of  them  are  concerned  with  this  paper,  namely  melanosoma 
and  wrayi,  and  these  I  have  dealt  with  in  discussing  the 
former. 

Hydrophis  torquatus  Giinther. 

Under  torauatus  I  now  include  three  forms  which 
I  have  previously  considered  distinct.  No  other  species  of 
sea  snake  that  I  have  j'^et  examined  shews  such  distinct 
changes,  both  in  scalation  and  in  colouration,  within  so 
small  an  area.  That  variation  should  occur  between  series 
found  upon  the  opposing  sides  of  the  Peninsula,  was  to  be 
expected,  but  that  two  distinct  forms  should  occur  in  the 
Gulf  of  Siam,  with  only  350  miles  of  open  sea  between  them, 
was  surprising.    With  a  large  series  of  each  form  however. 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  13 

available  for  examination,  I  find  that  they  intergrade  so 
completely  with  each  other,  that  it  seems  impossible  to 
distinguish  between  them.     The  three  forms  are  : — 

HyDUOPHIS   TORQUATLS    TORQUATl  S. 

33 — 37  scales  round  the  neck  ;  43 — 49  round  the  body. 

Ventrals  242—306. 
Head   in    the   adult    pale   grey,   with   a    considerable 
suffusion  of  yellow  on  the  top. 

Habitat.     Coast  of  Perak  and  Selangor. 

Hydrophls  torquatus  aagaardl 

32 — 37  scales  round  the  neck  ;  39 — 47  round  the  body. 
Ventrals  276—325. 

Head  in  the  adult  dark  olive  to  blackish,  with  a  curved 
yellow  mark  across  the  snout  and  along  the  sides. 

Habitat.     Coast  of  Patani,  Gulf  of  Siam. 

Hydrophls  torquatus  siamensis. 

29 — 35  scales  round  the  neck  ;  35 — 42  round  the  body. 
Ventrals  271—343. 

Colouration  as  in  aagaardi. 

Habitat.     Inner  Gulf  of  Siam. 

Hydrophis  torquatus  torquatus. 

Hydrophis  torquatus,  Giiatlier,  Rept.  Brit.  Ind.,  p.  369,  pi.  XXV, 
fig.  H,  (1864)  ;  Boulenger,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Rept.  and  Batr.,  p. 
190  (1912)  ;  N.  de  Rooij,  Rept.  Ind.  Aust.  Archipel.,  II,  p.  231  (1917). 

Distira  torquata,  Wall  (part.),  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II,  (8), 
p.  229  (1909). 

Coast  of  Perak,  39  exs.  ;  Bernam  River,  Selangor,  2  exs. 

Gunther's  types  came  from  Penang,  so  that  my  Perak 
coast  specimens  are,  for  all  practical  purposes,  topotypes. 
On  the  whole  they  are  a  very  uniform  lot,  and  shew  more 
constancy  in  scalation  than  the  other  two  forms  found  in 
the  Gulf. 

Variation. — The  frontal  shield,  except  in  one  instance, 
is  always  shorter  than  its  distance  to  the  rostral.  The 
supralabials  normally  are  seven,  the  first  four  being  usually 
complete,  the  fifth  divided,  and  the  last  two  (rarely  are 
there  three),  very  small.     Chin-shields  well  developed,  the 

Eosterior  pair  in  contact  with  each  other  or  partly  separated 
y  a  scale.  Four  infralabials  in  contact  with  the  chin- 
shields  ;  cuneiform  scales  invariably  present  between  the 
infralabials,  usually  a  series  after  the  second. 

33 — 37  scales  round  the  neck,  43 — 49  round  the  body, 
those  anterior  elongate,  with  truncate  or  bluntly  pointed 
apex,  those  posterior  more  or  less  hexagonal,  imbricate  or 
subimbricate  throughout,  with  a  central  tubercle  or  short 
keel.  Ventrals  distinct  throughout,  242 — 306.  Average  277. 
The  number  next  to  242  is  260. 

In  adult  specimens  the  depth  of  the  body  posteriorly 
is  from  2  to  2%  times  that  of  the  neck. 


14  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

Co/our.— This  varies  considerably  with  age.  The 
young  are  whitish,  with  from  46  to  63  well  defmed  black 
bands,  which  are  often  incomplete  ventrally.  Head  black, 
with  a  whitish  or  yellowish  mark  across  the  snout  and  along 
the  sides.  Adults  are  pale  grey  above,  yellowish  white  below, 
with  darker  grey  bands,  less  clearly  defined,  and  usually 
incomplete  ventrally  in  the  posterior  part  of  the  body.  In 
some  aged  individuals  the  bands  have  almost  entirely  dis- 
appeared, leaving  the  back  more  or  less  uniform  grey. 
Head  grey,  with  the  yellow  marks  more  extensive  and  less 
defined,  this  latter  colour  sometimes  covering  the  whole 
of  the  top  of  the  head  except  a  small  patch  on  the  crown. 

Length. — One  example  measures  835  mm.  in  total 
length,  but  the  majority  of  the  specimens  are  under  700  mm. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  8  to  10,  palatine, 
7 — 8  ;  pterygoid,  19  to  22  ;  mandibular,  16 — 18  (14  speci- 
mens examined) . 

Wall,  in  his  Monograph,  has  included  under  torquatus 
another  snake  which  Boulenger  now  recognises  as  diadema, 
(the  obscurus  of  the  Catalogue,  p.  284) .  His  argument  for 
combining  these  two  species  does  not  convince  me,  and  the 
points  of  difference  upon  which  he  states  Boulenger  has 
separated  them,  do  not  appear  to  me  to  be  the  correct  ones. 
The  difference  in  the  number  of  scales  round  the  neck  and 
body,  and  the  marked  difference  in  the  number  of  ventrals, 
have  been  overlooked  by  him  entirely. 

That  these  two  species  cannot  be  identical  is  well  shewn 
by  my  series,  which,  as  already  stated,  is  topotypical.  In 
the  number  of  scales  round  the  neck  and  body,  and  in  the 
number  of  ventrals,  they  agree  very  closely  with  Giinther's 
description. 

Hydrophis  torquatus  aagaardi,  subsp.  nov. 

Similar  to  H.  t.  torquatus,  but  with  average  fewer 
number  of  scale  rows  round  the  body,  greater  average 
number  of  ventrals,  larger  frontal,  and  darker  colouration. 

Type. — Adult  male,  author's  number,  1169,  collected 
July  1917,  off  the  coast  of  Bangnara,  Patani,  Gulf  of  Siam, 
by  Mr.  C.  J.  Aagaard. 

Number  of  specimens  examined,  44,  all  from  the  type 
locality. 

Variation. — The  frontal  shield  in  this  form  is  very 
variable  both  in  size  and  shape.  In  26  examples  it  is  as 
long  as  its  distance  to  the  rostral,  in  7  examples  it  is  shorter 
than,  and  in  9  it  is  longer  than,  its  distance  from  that  shield. 
In  No.  1267  it  is  considerably  shorter  than  its  distance  to  the 
rostral,  in  No.  1273  it  is  as  long  as  its  distance  to  the  end 
of  the  snout,  yet  there  can  be  no  doubt  that  these  two 
represent  the  same  species.  Two  postoculars  occur  in  one 
example.  As  with  the  typical  form,  the  temporal  shield 
is  verj'  constant,  a  single  scale  being  present  in  every 
instance.  The  supralabials  however  are  more  subject  to 
division  in  aagaardi,  and  fragmentation  may  occur  in  any 
of  them  after  the  second. 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  15 

32—37,  usually  33—35,  scales  round  the  neck,  39 — 47, 
usually  42 — 45,  round  the  body.  Ventrals  276 — 325. 
Average  297. 

Colour. — Greyish  or  greenish-grey  above,  yellowish 
white  below,  with  from  55 — 68  dark  grey  or  blackish  annuli, 
which  may  be  incomplete  \entrally.  Head  black  to  dark 
olive,  with  a  yellow  band  across  the  snout  and  continued 
back  along  the  sides  of  the  head.  Sometimes  a  few  yellow 
spots  un  the  frontal  and  parietal  shields.  With  age  all  the 
markings  lose  definition,  but  both  this  form  and  the 
succeeding  one  are  more  prone  to  keep  their  markings  in 
adult  life  than  the  typical  form. 

H.  t.  aaqaardi  represents  a  race  intermediate  between 
H.  t.  iypica  and  H.  t.  siamensis,  resembling  more  the  for- 
mer in  scalation  and  the  latter  in  colour.  But  for  the 
discovery  of  this  form,  I  should  still  have  regarded  H.  t. 
.siamensis  as  a  species  distinct  from  H.  t.  typica. 

AH  the  specimens  were  taken  in  deep  clear  sea  water, 
being  caught  in  trawling  nets,  some  as  far  as  20  miles  from 
the  coast.  I  have  much  pleasure  in  naming  this  subspecies 
after  Mr.  C.  J.  Aagaard,  of  the  Bangnara  Rubber  Estate, 
Patani,  to  whom  I  am  indebted  for  so  fine  a  series. 

Two  other  specimens,  Nos.  1276,  1175,  taken  off  the 
same  coast  and  in  company  with  typical  specimens  of  H.  t. 
aagaardi,  must  be  mentioned  here.  They  have  34  and  37 
scales  round  the  neck,  and  43  and  51  round  the  body 
respectively.  Ventrals  302  and  292.  Both  are  females  and 
both  have  two  superposed  temporal  shields  on  both  sides. 
In  other  respects  they  agree  entirely  with  H.  t.  aagaardi. 

No.  1276,  with  43  scale  rows  I  should  have  referred 
without  much  hesitation  to  this  form,  for  the  same  variation 
in  the  temporal  shields  is  to  be  found  in  its  northern  ally 
H.  t.  siamensis.  No.  1175,  with  51  scale  rows — no,  less 
than  4  in  excess  of  what  is  to  be  found  in  any  other  specimen 
of  my  series — is  not  so  easily  disposed  of.  For  the  present 
I  regard  them  both  as  aberrant  examples  of  H.  t.  aagaardi. 

Hydrophis  torquatus  siamensis  Smith. 

Hijdrophis  tiiberciilatus,  Smith,  Journ.  N.  H.  S.  Slam,  I,  pp. 
214,  247  (191.")). 

Hydrophis  siamensis,  Smith,  J.  N.  H.  S.  Slam,  II,  p.  341  (1917)  ; 
idem,  Journ.  Bombay  N.  H.  S.,  XXVI,  p.  682  (1919). 

Similar  to  H.  t.  torquatus,  but  with  fewer  scale  rows 
round  the  neck  and  body,  greater  average  number  of 
ventrals,  larger  average  frontal  and  darker  colour  ;  also  in 
a  tendency  of  the  temporal  shield  to  subdivision. 

Type. — Adult  male,  author's  number  1151,  collected 
at  Ban  Yao,  Inner  Gulf  of  Siamv  Sept.,  1917. 

Number  of  specimens  examined,  84. 

Variation. — The  frontal  shield  is  as  long  as  its  distance 
to  the  rostral  in  about  50%  of  the  specimens  ;  in  the 
remainder  it  is  shorter,  with  two  exceptions,  in  which  it  is 
nearly  as  long  as  its  distance  to  the  end  of  the  snout.     The 


1 6  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

temporal  shield  is  not  so  constant  as  in  the  other  two  forms, 
in  some  examples  having  undergone  fragmentation  into  2, 
3  or  4  pieces.  It  is  noteworthy  however,  that  this  irre- 
gularity is  almost  entirely  confined  to  the  individuals  of  one 
locality.  Of  my  84  specimens,  division  of  this  shield  on  one 
or  both  sides  occurs  in  16,  of  which  14  are  from  the  mouth 
of  the  Chantabun  river. 

In  7  embryos  extracted  from  their  mother,  a  single 
shield  is  present  in  5,  while  in  the  remaining  2  it  is  divided 
The  mother  has  one  shield  on  one  side,  two  on  the  other. 

The  supralabial  shields  are  subject  to  the  same  irre- 
gularity as  in  aagaardi. 

29 — 34,  usually  31 — 33,  scales  round  the  neck,  35 — 42, 
usually  37—39,  round  the  body.  Ventrals  271 — 343. 
Average  300.  (Chantabun,  E.  coast  series,  296  ;  Meklong, 
W.  coast  series,  306). 

In  the  actual  increase  in  the  number  of  scale  rows 
round  the  body,  as  compared  with  that  round  the  neck,  this 
form  differs  from  both  the  preceding  ones.  In  siamensis 
the  body  count  is  from  5 — 9,  usually  6 — 8,  more  than  the 
neck,  whereas  in  the  other  two  it  is  from  6 — 11,  usually 
8—10. 

Colour. — As  in  aagaardi,  except  that  the  yellow  upon 
the  head  is  inclined  to  be  more  diffuse.  In  a  few  examples 
it  is  in  excess  of  the  ground  colour.  Most  of  the  specimens 
are  completely  banded.  Two  individuals,  Nos.  1279,  1298, 
have  the  head  and  back  almost  entirely  uniform  darkish 
grey  ;  other  examples  are  characterized  by  a  broad  irregular 
ventral  band,  either  broken  or  continuous. 

Distribution. — From  Meklong  on  the  Western  side 
of  the  Gulf  to  Koh  Chang  on  the  East.  It  is  particularly 
abundant  at  the  mouths  of  the  Meklong  and  Chantabun 
rivers. 

Dimensions.— Xs  will  be  seen  from  a  study  of  the 
annexed  tables,  the  two  forms  in  the  Gulf  appear  to  grow 
to  a  larger  size  than  that  found  in  the  typical  locality. 

Specimens  of  this  snake  which  I  sent  to  the  Museum 
of  the  Bombay  Natural  History  Society,  have  been  diagnosed 
by  Col.  Wall  as  Hydrophis  cyanocinctus.  My  reasons  for 
dissenting  from  his  opinion  have  already  been  given  in  the 
Journal  of  that  Society  (l.c.s.),  and  his  reply  to  my  criti- 
cisms later  (p.  864)  do  not  in  any  way  influence  my  previous 
conclusions. 

The  tables  of  FI.  t.  siamensis  and  H.  cyanocinctus 
which  I  have  given  here  should  be  sufficient  to  shew  that 
the  variation  in  the  number  of  scale  rows  in  these  two  forms 
is  not  the  same.  Nor  can  his  other  remarks  Avith  regard  to 
scalation,  size  and  colouration,  in  view  of  the  large  series 
now  available  for  examination,  be  maintained.  As  I  iiave 
already  remarked,  the  two  snakes  when  compared  side  by 
side — however  much  they  may  be  alike  on  paper— are  to  me 
so  different,  that  1  am  surprised  that  Col.  Wall  should  ever 
have  thought  them  identical. 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  17 

Breeding. — ^Young  are  born  in  February  and  March. 
Two  females  are  of  interest,  as  shewing  the  diflference  in 
the  size  of  the  embryos  due  to  nutrition.  Tlie  parents  are 
of  equal  length  925  mm. — but  while  one  contained  a  brood 
of  8,  the  other  had  only  3.  Both  broods  'are  apparently 
fully  developed.  The  average  length  of  the  family  of  8 
is  285  mm.,  that  of  the  other  325. 

To  this  race  I  refer  the  specimen  recorded  by  Flower 
from  the  Gulf  of  Siam  (P.Z.S.,  1899,  p.  687,  No.  190) 
as  Hijdvophis  ohscarus  (now  diadema) .  I  count  it  to 
have  32  and  38  scale  rows,  with  302  ventrals  and  10 
posterior  maxillary  teeth.  It  is  I  believe  the  only  record  of 
diadema  from  the  Gulf. 

Hydrophis  caerulescens  (Shaw). 

Hydrophis  caerulescens,  Bouleng.,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  p.  275  (1896)  ; 
idem,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Kept,  and  Batr.,  p.  187  (1912)  ;  Wall, 
Journ.  N.  H.  S.  Bombay,  xxiii,  pp.  373/374  (1914). 

Distira  caerulescens,  Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  ii,  (8), 
p.  231  (1909). 

This  snake  has  a  wide  distribution,  and  from  Bombay 
to  C.ochin  China  appears  to  be  found  almost  everywhere 
along  the  Asiatic  coast.  Curiously  enough  it  has  not  yet 
been  recorded  from  the  Malay  Archipelago, 

With  its  large  number  of  strongly  keeled  scales  round 
the  neck  and  body,  it  is  well  differentiated  from  most  othervS, 
and  has  not  been  subject  to  much  confusion  in  the  past. 

Boulenger's  conception  of  this  species,  as  regards  the 
number  of  scales  round  the  neck  and  body,  is  without  doubt 
too  restricted.  Wall,  working  on  more  material,  found  the 
variation  to  be  considerably  greater.  He  was  dealing 
however,  chiefly  with  Indian  specimens.  With  the  large 
series  before  me  now  (98  examples),  from  the  coasts  of 
Siam  and  the  Malay  Peninsula,  the  range  can  be  still  further 
increased.  Between  the  most  extreme  forms,  such  as  one 
from  Orissa  (No.  14493,  Indian  Museum),  with  43  scales 
round  the  neck,  and  51  round  the  body,  and  another  of 
mine  (No.  1352)  from  the  Gulf  of  Siam,  with  31  round  the 
neck  and  38  round  the  body,  the  difference  is  so  great  that 
they  might  be  considered  distinct,  were  it  not  that  the 
gradation  between  them  can  be  easily  traced. 

I  have  only  been  able  to  examine  a  small  series  from  the 
Indian  coasts,  and  between  them  and  examples  from  the 
Straits  of  Malacca  I  can  find  no  marked  difference.  Those 
from  the  Indian  coasts  have  a  slightly  higher  average  num- 
ber of  scale  rows,  and  a  larger  series  might  shew  this 
character  to  be  constant,  the  maximum  average  number 
of  scale  rows  obtaining  in  that  region.  W^all  also  has 
pointed  out  that  this  sea  snake  possesses  a  character  which 
is  almost  pecuHarly  its  own,  namely,  that  the  parietal  shield 
nearly  always  fails  to  touch  the  postocular.  His  observa- 
tion, derived  chiefly  from  Indian  specimens,  applies  equally 
well  to  my  series  from  the  Straits  of  Malacca^ 


As  shewn  later,  this  character  is  absent  in  H.  caerulescens 
thai.  I  have  found  it  present  also,  as  an  abnormality,  in 
H.  klossi  and  H.  consobrinus. 


i8  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.          [Vol.  X, 

I  therefore  group  all  these  together  under  forma 
caerulescens  (type  locality,  Vizagapatam) . 

Hydrophis  caerulescens  caerulescens. 

33  to  43  scales  round  the  neck,  42  to  53  ^  round  the 
body  ;  ventrals,  253  to  337  ;  parietals  usually  not  in  contact 
with  the  postocular. 

Colour. — Greyish  above,  yellowish-white  below,  with 
from  40  to  60  dark  bands  which  may  be  incomplete  ven- 
trally.  The  young  have  the  bands  very  clearly  defined,  but 
with  age  the  markings  lose  definition,  and  in  some  adults 
are  scarcely  recognizable,  the  back  being  almost  uniform 
grey.  Head  blackish  in  the  young,  darkish  grey  in  the 
adult,  sometimes  with  a  light  streak  behind  the  eye  -. 

Habitat. — Shores  of  India  and  Burma  and  west  coast 
of  the  Malay  Peninsula, 

Number  of  specimens  examined,  65.  Coast  of  India, 
9  ;  Mergui  Archipelago,  2  ;  Straits  of  Malacca,  54. 

The  actual  variation  between  my  series  from  the  Indian 
coast  and  the  Straits  of  Malacca  is  as  follows  :— 

India.  35  to  43  scales  round  the  neck,  45  to  51  round 
the  body  ;  ventrals,  269  to  332. 

Straits  of  Malacca.  33  to  42  (usually  37  to  39)  scales 
round  the  neck  ;  45  to  51  (usually  45  to  48)  round  the  body  ; 
ventrals,  253  to  319  (average,  290). 

Variation. — The  frontal  shield  in  11  examples  is  as 
long-  as  its  distance  from  the  rostral.  In  3  examples  the 
posterior  chin-shields  are  absent.  The  parietal  shield 
touches  the  postocular  on  both  sides  in  3  examples  only, 
and  on  1  side  in  7  more. 

Specimens  from  the  Gulf  of  Siam  I  distinguish  as 

Hydrophis  caerulescens  thai  ',  subsp.  nov. 

Dift'ers  from  the  tj'^pical  form  in  having  fewer  scale 
rows  round  the  neck  and  body,  and  in  the  parietals  usually 
being  in  contact  with  the  postocular. 

31  to  38  (usually  33  to  36)  scales  round  the  neck,  38 
to  49  (usually  41  to  45)  round  the  body  ;  ventrals,  262  to 
334. 

Colour. — The  dark  bands  upon  the  body,  although  not 
so  conspicuous  in  adults  as  in  juveniles,  do  not  shew  that 
tendency  to  become  entirely  lost  with  advancing  age  as  in 
the  preceding  form. 

Habitat. — Coasts  of  Siam  and  Cochin  China. 

Number  of  specimens  examined,  42  (Gulf  of  Siam,  40, 
Cap  St.  Jacques,  2) . 

Type. — Adult  male,  author's  number,  1353,  collected 
at  Hua  Hin,  Gulf  of  Siam,  in  June  1917. 


^53  is  recorded  by  Wall  (Monograph). 

^The  presence  of  this  streak  is  not  mentioned  by  any  author, 
although  Giinther  very  clearly  figures  it.  It  occurs  in  about  30% 
of  my  specimens. 

'Thai  =  Siamese,  pronounced  tai, 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  19 

Variation. — The  frontal  in  15  examples  is  as  long  as 
its  distance  from  the  rostral  ;  in  one  it  is  longer  than  its 
distance  ;  in  no  examples  are  the  chin  shields  absent ; 
in  two  instances  the  posterior  pair  are  in  contact  with 
each  other  ;  the  parietal  shield  fails  to  touch  the  postocular 
in  two  examples  only  on  both  sides,  and  in  one  example 
more  on  one  side.      Average  ventral  count,  291. 

Dentition. — H.  caerulescena  has  an  unusually  large 
number  of  teeth  in  the  maxillary  bone  behind  the  poison 
fangs.  I  find  the  dentition  as  follows  : — Posterior  maxil- 
lary, 13  to  16  ;  palatine,  7  or  8  ;  pterygoid,  21  to  23  ; 
mandibular,  21  to  25  (7  specimens  examined) . 

Hydrophis  klossi  Boulenger. 

Hiidrophis  klossi,  Boulenger,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Rept.  and 
Batr,,p.  190  (1912)  ;  Smith,  Journ.  Bombay  N.  H.  S.,  xxiii,  p.  787 
(1915). 

35  exs.,  Straits  of  Malacca,  13  $  ,  5  9  ;  Gulf  of  Siam, 
10  $,7  9. 

Boulenger's  description  was  drawn  up  from  a  single 
specimen,  but  with  the  large  amount  of  material  now 
available  this  can  be  considerably  augmented,  and  it  will 
be  simpler  to  redescribe  the  species  than  to  add  a  number 
of  points  to  his  original  remarks. 

Description. — Head  small,  body  long  and  slender 
anteriorly,  the  posterior  depth  in  the  adult  being  from  2^/^ 
to  3  times  that  of  the  neck.  Snout  distinctly  projecting 
beyond  the  lower  jaw  ;  eye  equal  to  or  slightly  less  than 
its  distance  from  the  mouth.  Rostral  as  broad  as  deep,  or 
broader  than  deep,  the  portion  visible  above  equal  to  from 
1|3  to  213  the  internasal  suture  ;  frontal  small,  longer  than 
broad,  usually  shorter  than  its  distance  from  the  rostral ; 
one  prae-  and  one  postocular  ;  one  large  anterior  temporal ; 
usually  five  supralabials,  3rd  and  4th  touching  the  eye, 
sometimes  a  small  sixth  ;  two  pairs  of  cliin-shields,  subequal 
in  size,  the  posterior  pair  partly  or  completely  separated  ; 
four  infralabials  in  contact  with  the  chin-shields. 

23  to  27  scales  round  the  neck,  31  to  39  round  the  body, 
imbricate  throughout,  the  anterior  ones  elongate  with 
bluntly  pointed  extremities,  smooth  or  faintly  keeled,  the 
posterior  ones  broader  with  more  rounded  extremities  and 
more  strongly  keeled.  Ventrals  distinct  throughout,  360  to 
402. 

Greyish  or  greenish  above,  yellowish  or  whitish  below, 
with  from  50  to  75  dark  bands.  In  the  fore  part  of  the 
body  these  are  as  broad  above  as  below  and  slightly  broader 
than  their  interspaces,  behind  usually  twice  as  broad  above 
as  below.  In  some  the  bands  are  incomplete  ventrally, 
and  in  some  they  are  linked  up  by  a  black  line  running  along 
the  ventral  shields  ;  or  the  lower  part  of  the  neck  may  be 
entirely  black.  Head  blackish  to  olivaceous,  lighter  on  the 
snout,  sometimes  with  an  indistinct  horse-shoe  shaped 
mark,  its  front  across  the  praefrontals  and  the  ends  upon 
the  temporal  shields.     The  young  at  birth  are  white,  with 


20  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

clearly  defined  black  bands.  Head  entirely  black,  or  with 
a  yellow  spot  behind  each  nostril,  or  with  the  horse-shoe 
mark  ;  with  age  the  bands  become  less  distinct  but  are 
always  clearly  recognizable. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  5  or  6  ;  palatine,  7  ; 
pterygoid,  9  or  10  ;  mandibular,  13  or  14  (4  specimens 
examined) . 

Variation. — The  frontal  shield  is  very  variable  as 
regards  size,  but  except  in  one  example  is  always  shorter 
than  its  distance  from  the  rostral  ;  in  one  example  only  it  is 
nearly  as  small  as  in  the  type.  One  example  has  the  4th 
supralabial  touching  the  eye  on  one  side,  and  the  3rd, 
4th  and  5th  on  the  other.  Fragmentation  of  the  upper 
labials,  and  cuneiform  scales  among  the  lower  are  rare, 
the  former  condition  occurs  in  two  examples,  the  latter  in 
one. 

//.  klossi  with  its  uniform  rows  of  imbricate  scales, 
appears  to  be  closely  allied  to  H.  nigrocinctus  Daudin,  from 
the  Indian  seas,  and  H.  melanoceplialus  Gray  from  the 
Riu  Kiu  Islands.  In  the  number  of  scales  round  the  body 
these  three  forms  are  much  alike,  but  klossi  has  more 
ventrals,  a  smaller  frontal  and  fewer  supralabials. 
Nigrocinctus  also  has  two  anterior  temporals. 

As  will  be  seen  by  inspection  of  the  accompanying 
tables,  the  Siamese  form  has  a  slightly  higher  average 
number  of  scale  rows  than  the  Malaccan  form.  The  varia- 
tion is  as  follows  : — 

Straits  of  Malacca,  forma  typica. 

23 — 25  scales  round  the  neck  ;  31 — 35  round  the  body. 
Ventrals,  361—386  (av.  372). 

Gulf  of  Siam. 

23 — 27  scales  round  the  neck  ;  33 — 39  round  the  body. 
Ventrals,  360—386  (av.  372) . 

Breeding. — In  the  Gulf  this  occurs  in  March,  from  2 
to  5  young  being  produced.  Females  taken  off"  the  coast 
of  Perak  in  September,  shewed  the  embryos  well  advanced 
in  development. 

Hydrophis  consobrinus  Smith. 
Journ.  Nat.  Hist.  Soc.  Siam,  II,  p.  341  (1917). 

Diagnosis. — Posterior  maxillary  teeth,  5.  Head  very 
small,  body  very  long  and  slender  anteriorly  ;  25  to  31  scales 
round  the  neck,  36  to  45  round  the  body  ;  ventrals,  328  to 
401.  A  single  anterior  temporal.  Head  Avith  a  curved 
yellow  mark  above. 

Description. — Head  very  small,  body  very  long  and 
slender  anteriorly,  its  greatest  depth  in  the  adult  being  from 
two  and  a  half  to  three  times  that  of  the  neck.  Eye 
slightly  greater  than  its  distance  from  the  mouth  ;  rostral 
broader  than  deep,  visible  above  ;  frontal  once  and  one 
third  to  once  and  a  half  times  longer  than  broad,  as  long 
as  or  slightly  shorter  tlian  its  distance  to  the  rostral ;  one 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  21 

prae-  and  one,  rarely  two,  postoculars  ;  a  single  large 
anterior  temporal  succeeded  by  another  not  so  large,  and 
with  4  to  7,  usually  5  or  6,  small  scales  in  a  series  between 
them  and  behind  the  parietals.  Six  supralabials,  2nd 
largest  and  in  contact  with  the  praefrontal,  3rd  and  4th 
touching  the  eye,  6th  very  small.  Chin-shields  well  deve- 
loped, subequal,  the  posterior  pair  in  contact  or  partly 
separated.  Four  infralabials  in  contact  with  the  chin- 
shields. 

25  to  31  scales  round  the  neck,  36  to  45  round  the 
thickest  part  of  the  body,  those  on  the  neck  imbricate, 
elongate,  with  truncated  apex,  those  posterior  hexagonal, 
subimbricate,  with  a  small  tubercle  or  short  keel.  Ventrals 
distinct  throughout,  bicarinate,  328  to  401. 

Colour. — Greyish  above,  yellowish  or  whitish  below, 
with  dark  grey  bars  or  bands,  60  to  80  in  number.  In  the 
fore-part  of  the  body  these  bands  are  as  broad  above  as 
below,  and  broader  than  their  interspaces  ;  behind  broadest 
on  the  back,  narrowing  on  the  sides,  and  usually  incomplete 
across  the  belly.  Head  blackish  or  greyish,  with  a  curved 
yellow  mark,  its  front  on  the  nostrils,  and  reaching  back 
along  the  sides  of  the  head.  Often  a  connecting  bar  across 
the  frontal  and  another  across  the  parietal  shields.  With 
age  these  markings  lose  definition. 

Variation. — The  frontal  shield  touches  the  nasals  in 
one  example  ;  the  anterior  temporal  by  fusion  with  the 
6th  supralabial  sometimes  reaches  the  border  of  the  mouth  ; 
fission  of  the  2nd  supralabial  in  one  example  produces  a 
pseudo-loreal  (No.  2216)  ;  marginal  fragmentation  of  the 
supralabials  is  not  present  in  any  example  ;  usually  there 
is  a  single  cuneiform  scale  after  the  third  infralabial. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  5  ;  palatine,  7 ; 
pterygoid,  15  or  16  ;  mandibular,  13  or  14  (3  specimens 
examined) . 

Type. — Adult  male,  author's  number,  1132  ;  collected 
at  the  mouth  of  the  Bangpakong  river,  Inner  Gulf  of  Siam, 
in  February,  1917. 

Habitat. — Coasts  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Siam  and 
Cochin  China. 

Remarks. — H.  consobrinus  appears  to  be  most  nearly 
related  to  H.  brookii  Giinther,  and  H.  floweri  Boulenger, 
two  species  described  from  the  north  coast  of  Borneo  ;  and 
it  is  not  unlikely  that  it  will  ultimately  have  to  be  united 
with  one  or  other  of  them.  Neither,  however,  accord 
entirely  >vith  the  scalation  presented  by  my  large  series  of 
consobrinus,  and  until  more  is  known  about  the  variation 
existing  in  these  two  forms,  I  leave  mine  distinct. 

With  the  true  status  of  this  snake  therefore  still  uncer- 
tain, I  refrain  from  describing  geographical  races,  although 
the  form  found  in  the  Straits  of  Malacca  is  quite  distinct 
from  that  found  in  the  Gulf.  The  case  is  further  com- 
plicated by  the  three  examples  from  Cap  St.  Jacques,  which 


22  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

also  differ  from  the  Gulf  series,  but  shew  a  tendency  to 
revert  back  towards  the  Malaccan  form.  The  variation  is 
as  follows  : — 

Gulf  of  Siam. 

25  to  27  scales  round  the  neck.  37  to  41  round  the 
body.     Ventrals,  358  to  401.     Av.  377. 

Number  of  specimens  examined,  18.  The  frontal  is 
as  long  as  its  distance  from  the  rostral  in  17,  shorter  than 
in  one. 

Straits  of  Malacca. 

27,  usually  29  to  31,  scales  round  the  neck.  39  to  45, 
usually  41  to  43,  round  the  body.  Ventrals  328  to  396.  Av. 
367. 

Number  of  specimens  examined,  50.  The  frontal 
shield  is  as  long  as  its  distance  from  the  rostral  in  33 
examples,  shorter  than  in  the  remainder. 

Cap  St.  Jacques. 

29  to  30  scales  round  the  neck.  41  to  43  round  the 
body.     Ventrals,  387  to  400. 

The  frontal  shield  is  longer  than  its  distance  to  the 
rostral  in  one  example,  equal  to  in  two. 

With  the  typical  form  of  fasciatus  as  I  now  conceive 
it,  this  species  should  not  be  confused,  but  from  atriceps, 
with  its  lower  scale  formula,  separation  may  at  times  be 
difficult.  The  yellow  head  markings  of  consobrinus  are, 
however,  very  consistent,  and  in  fresh  specimens  an  almost 
infallible  guide.  A  small  but  very  useful  differential 
character  in  scalation  between  them  is  also  to  be  found  in 
the  scales  behind  the  parietal  shields.  In  atriceps  there 
are  usually  three  small  scales  lying  in  a  series  between  the 
large  posterior  temporal  shields  and  behind  the  parietals. 
Rarely  there  are  four  or  two.  Consobrinus  on  the  other 
hand  has  usually  five  or  six  in  the  series,  sometimes  four, 
rarely  seven,  their  number  depending  upon  the  size  of  the 
posterior  temporal  shields.  As  in  atriceps,  the  posterior 
temporal  shield  of  consobrinus  may  be  divided  by  a  vertical 
suture  into  two. 

H.  klossi,  which  in  the  Gulf  has  often  the  same  number 
of  scale  rows  on  the  body  as  consobrinus,  can  be  distin- 
guished by  its  distinctly  imbricate  scales,  fewer  supralabials 
and  proportionately  larger  head  of  olivaceous  colour. 

Breeding. — A  gravid  female  taken  off  the  coast  of 
Perak  in  December  contained  7  embryos  in  an  early  stage  of 
development.  Another  taken  in  February  contained  5  fully 
developed  young,  varying  from  330  to  340  mm.  in  length. 
The  mother  measured  880  mm.,  tail  70. 

Hydrophis  fasciatus  (Schneider). 
Aturia  lindsayi,  Gray,  Zool.  Misc.  p.  61  (1842). 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  23 

Hijdrophis  fasciatiis,  Boulcnger,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  281 
(1896)  ;  idem,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Kept,  and  Batr.,  p.  189  (1912)  ;  N. 
de  Rooij,  Kept.  Ind.  Aust.  Archipel.,  II,  p.  230  (1917). 

Hijdrophis  lepiodira,  Boulenger,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  p.  285. 

Hijdrophis  rhombifer,  Boulenger,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  p.  188. 

Distira  fasciata  (part.),  Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II  (8), 
p.  205  (1909). 

Hydro  phis  fasciatiis  as  it  is  known  at  present,  is  said 
to  be  distributed  from  the  coasts  of  India  to  China  and  New 
Guinea.  The  evidence  for  its  existence  in  the  Far  East 
is  somewhat  obscure,  and  it  will  be  as  well  to  discuss  the 
specimens  which  have  contributed  to  the  statement  before 
proceeding  further. 

Hijdrophis  lindsayi  (Gray) .  The  type  and  only  known 
specimen  is  in  the  British  Museum.  It  has  31  and  48  scales 
round  the  neck  and  body  respectively,  and  452  ventrals\ 
Its  habitat,  China,  is  vague,  and  Mr.  Boulenger  tells  me  he 
does  not  attach  much  importance  to  it. 

H.  fasciatus  has  been  recorded  by  Boettger  from 
Manila,  and  also  from  Miyakoshima,  Riu  Kiu  (Loo  Choo) 
Ids.  The  former  specimen  has  been  placed  by  Van 
Denburgh  and  Thompson  under  their  Disteira  cincinnatii- 
but,  as  I  shall  presently  endeavour  to  shew,  their  snake 
agrees  so  closely  with  the  form  of  fasciatiis  which  is  found 
in  the  Gulf  of  Siam,  that  I  think  they  should  be  lUTitcd. 

Stejneger  has  referred  the  Japanese  example  to  Disteira 
mehiiwcephala,'  but  presumably  has  not  examined  it.  He 
is  probably  right  in  doing  so,  l3ut  its  scale  formula  is  so 
near  to  that  given  by  Van  Denburgh  and  Thompson  for 
some  of  their  Manila  specimens,  that  in  the  light  of  present 
knowledge  it  might  be  as  well  to  reserve  opinion. 

Stejneger's  suggestion  that  nielanocephala  may  ulti- 
mately prove  to  be  only  a  race  of  fasciatus  (p.  421),  is  not 
in  my  opinion  borne  out  by  the  example  he  has  kindly 
sent  me.  With  its  imbricate  scales,  those  on  the  posterior 
part  of  the  body  having  more  rounded  edges  rather  than 
the  regular  hexagons  of  fasciatus,  with  its  7  or  8  supra- 
labials,  and  7  posterior  maxillary  teeth,  I  believe  it  to  be 
quite  distinct.  Fasciatus  has  only  5  teeth  beliind  the  poison 
fangs,  and  this  number  appears  to  be  constant. 

Hydrophis  atriceps  Giinther.  The  type  is  from  the 
Gulf  of  Siam,  and  it  has  28  and  44  scales  round  the  neck 
and  body  respectively,  and  3()4  ventrals.  Such  a  scale  com- 
bination is  very  typical  of  the  form  which  is  found  in  the 
Gulf,  and  diti'ers  distinctly  from  the  one  which  inhabits  the 
Straits  of  Malacca,  and  apparently  also  the  entire  Sea  of 
Bengal.  The  dit^erence  is  so  marked  that  it  is  entitled  to 
subspecific  distinction,  and  in  choosing  a  name  for  it  one 
cannot  do  better  than  revive  Giinther's. 

'  For  the  scale  formulae  of  H.  lindsayi,  H.  atriceps,  and 
Cantor's  specimen  of  H.  fasciatus  from  Penang,  I  am  indebted  to 
Mr.  Boulenger. 

'Proc.  California  Acad,  Science,  (4),  III,  p.  47,  Dec.  1908. 

'  Herpetology  of  Japan,  p.  422, 


24  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

I  recognize  two  forms  which  I  define  as  follows  :  — 

Hydrophis  fasciatus  fasciatus. 
27  to  33  scales  round  the  neck.     47  to  58  round  the 
body.     Ventrals  400  to  504  (531,  Wall).     Av.  455. 

Habitat.  Coasts  of  India  and  Burma  to  the  Malay 
Archipelago. 

Hydrophis  fasciatus  atriceps. 

25  to  30,  usually  27  to  29,  scales  round  the  neck.  40 
to  49,  usually  43  to  45,  round  the  body.  Ventrals  327  to 
452.     Av.  366. 

Habitat.  Gulf  of  Siam  and  South  China  Sea  to  Malay 
Archipelago. 

Both  forms  appear  to  extend  their  distribution  into  the 
seas  of  the  Indo-Australian  Archipelago,  but  the  particular 
range  of  each  one  has  yet  to  be  determined. 

Hydrophis  fasciatus  fasciatus. 

The  type  specimens  are  in  the  Berlin  Museum.  Their 
habitat  is  unknown.  Dr.  Nelly  de  Rooy  has  kindly  made 
enquiries  for  me  and  she  is  informed  that  they  have  29  and 
30  scales  round  the  neck,  52  and  53  round  the  body,  and 
457  ventrals.  This  description  accords  with  the  form  found 
west  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  and  shoukl  therefore  be 
designated  the  typical  one. 

The  figures  I  have  given  above  for  this  form,  are  based 
chiefly  upon  my  series  from  the  Straits  of  Malacca,  but  all 
the  specimens  that  I  have  examined  from  the  Indian  coast 
also  agree  with  them.  Wall  records  examples  from  India 
with  a  lower  body  count,  but  as  he  enumerates  at  mid-body, 
another  3  or  4  may  be  added  to  his  figures  to  arrive  at  the' 
maximum  number.  Boettger  records  two  specimens  from 
Madras  with  52  and  56  respectively. 

This  range  of  variation  will  also  include  H.  rhombifer 
BIgr.,  (56  scales  round  the  body,  type  locahty  coast  of 
Perak),  and  //.  leptodira  Blgr.  (58  scales  round  the  body, 
type  locality  Mouth  of  the  Ganges*  ?),  and  that  his  two 
forms  should  now  become  synonyms  of  fasciatus,  Mr. 
Boulenger  is  agreed.  Wall,  in  his  Monograph,  came  to  this 
same  conclusion,  but  in  his  conception  of  the  species  has 
included  H.  hrookii  Giinther,  a  snake  which  I  believe  to  be 
quite  distinct. 

Further  collections  from  the  coast  of  India  may  possi- 
bly inodify  the  definition  of  this  form  as  given  above,  but 
it  will  not  alter  the  separation  of  the  Malaccan  race  as 
distinct  from  that  found  in  the  Gulf  of  Siam. 

Variation. — The  following  remarks  concern  my  series 
from  the  Straits  of  Malacca.  The  rostral  is  as  high  as 
broad  in  one  example  ;  the  frontal  is  shorter  than  its  dis- 
tance to  the  rostral  in  two  examples  ;  two  postoculars  occur 
in  two  examples  ;  the  praefrontal  shields  fail  to  touch  the 
supralabials  on  both  sides  in  three  examples,  and  on  one 


*Tlie  record  is  Cantor's  and  possibly  in  error. 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  25 

side  in  two  more  ;  the  posterior  temporal  is  as  large  as  the 
anterior  or  larger  ;  a  cuneiform  scale  is  present  in  all  after 
the  third  infralabial. 

Colour. — None  of  my  series  (except  one  juvenile)  is 
completely  banded.  Above  they  are  pale  grey,  with  from 
60  to  80  dark  grey  dorsal  rhombs,  which  in  some  of  them 
are  continued  round  the  body  as  pale  bands,  but  in  the  fore 
part  of  the  body  only.  The  transition  from  the  dark  dorsal 
rhomb  to  the  paler  ventral  band  occurs  with  a  fairly  clear 
line  of  demarcation.  Below  creamy  white  ;  head,  neck 
below,  and  anterior  part  of  belly,  black.  One  specimen. 
No.  1150,  is  very  pale,  being  almost  white  in  the  posterior 
part  of  the  body,  with  the  dorsal  marks  only  just  visible. 

To  H.  fasciatiis  typica  I  refer  the  H.  gracilis  recorded 
by  Hanitsch  (Kept.  Raffles  Mus.,  1897,  p.  101) .  For  its  scale 
formula  see  the  table. 

Hydrophis  fasciatus  atriceps. 

Hadrophis  atriceps,  Giinther,  Rept.  Brit.  Ind.,  p.  371,  pi.  xxv, 

fig.  1  (1864). 

Disteira  cincinnatii.  Van  Denburgh  and  Thompson,  Proc. 
California  Acad.  Science,  (4),  111,  p.  41,  Dec.  1908. 

The  scalation  and  distribution  of  this  form  have  already 
been  dealt  with. 

Number  of  specimens  examined,  60  ;  Gulf  of  Siam, 
58  ;  Cap  St.  Jacques,  2. 

The  sudden  and  marked  diminution  in  the  number  of 
scale  rows  and  ventrals,  as  well  as  the  alteration  in  colour, 
which  characterizes  nearly  all  my  specimens  from  the  Gulf 
ot  Siam  as  compared  with  those  from  the  Straits,  induced 
me  for  a  long  time  to  believe  that  they  were  distinct.  I 
cannot  however  find  any  certain  grounds  upon  which  they 
can  be  separated.  Between  an  example  from  Pulau  Angsa, 
with  57  scales  round  the  body,  504  ventrals,  and  the  back 
with  dark  rhomboidal  marks,  and  another  from  Ban  Yao 
with  41  scales  round  the  body,  327  ventrals,  and  the  body 
marked  with  complete  bands,  there  is  every  degree  of 
gradation. 

Variation. — As  one  would  expect,  with  fewer  scales 
round  the  body  in  proportion  to  those  upon  the  neck,  this 
form  is  relatively  stouter  anteriorly  than  the  Malaccan  one. 

The  rostral  shield  may  be  as  broad  as  high  ;  the  frontal 
shield  in  six  examples  is  longer  than  its  distance  to  the 
rostral,  in  two  of  these  being  in  contact  with  the  nasals.  In 
No.  1261  the  frontal  is  very  small,  much  shorter  than  its 
distance  to  the  rostral.  The  anterior  temporal  in  one 
instance  (No.  1252)  is  divided  on  one  side  to  form  two 
superposed  shields  ;  the  posterior  temporal  shield  is  seldom 
as  large  as  the  anterior,  and  is  often  divided  in  two  by  a 
vertical  suture.  Normally  the  supralabials  are  undivided, 
but  in  one  instance  there  is  fragmentation  of  the  fifth.  In 
five  examples  the  temporal  shield  reaches  the  border  of  the 
mouth  to  the  exclusion  of  the  sixth  and  seventh  labials.     A 


26  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

single  cuneiform  shield  is  invariably  present  after  the  third 
infralabial.  25  scales  round  the  neck  occurs  twice  in  the 
series,  30  twice  ;  40  scales  round  the  body  occurs  once,  49 
five  times.  Ventral  variation.  Males,  327—396  ;  females, 
338—452.  The  ventral  count  of  452  (No.  2876)  appears  to 
be  quite  abnormal,  the  numbers  next  to  it  in  succession 
being  434,  420,  416,  413.  H.  lindsayi  agrees  closely  with 
this  example. 

Colour. — Greyish  above,  greenish-  or  yellowish-white 
below,  with  from  50  to  75  blackish  annuli  or  dorsal  bars. 
Head  and  anterior  part  of  body  below  entirely  black  at  all 
ages  ;  sometimes  a  yellow  spot  behind  the  nostril  or  the 
eye.  In  No.  2873  these  spots  have  coalesced  to  form  a 
complete  yellow  horse  shoe.  All  the  specimens  from  Ban 
Yao  and  Chantabun  are  completely  banded,  the  band  being 
paler  above  than  below  but  without  any  clear  line  of  demar- 
cation ;  those  from  Cap  St.  Jacques  and  the  western  side 
of  the  Gulf  are,  with  one  exception,  coloured  as  the 
Malaccan  specimens.  Two  specimens  from  Bangpakong 
form  a  connecting  link  between  these  two  forms.  No.  1309 
has  dorsal  and  ventral  bars,  the  two  meeting  in  a  point  on 
the  side  of  the  body. 

Distribution. — Nearly  all  my  specimens  are  from  the 
mouths  of  two  rivers,  Chantabun  and  Ban  Yao.  At  the 
latter  spot  it  is  the  predominant  form,  nearly  all  the  sea 
snakes  coming  from  that  locality  belonging  to  this  species. 

Breeding. — In  the  Gulf  young  are  born  in  February  and 
March,  from  4  to  8  being  produced.  Their  markings  are 
practically  black  and  white. 

Dentition. — The  teeth  of  H.  fasciatus  are  as  follows  : — 
posterior  maxillary,  5  ;  palatine,  6  or  7  ;  pterygoid,  12  to  16  ; 
mandibular,  14  or  15  (8  specimens  examined). 

I  have  not  examined  any  specimens  of  Disteira  cincin- 
natii  Van  Denburgh  and  Thompson,  from  Manila,  but  as 
already  stated  their  description  agrees  so  closely  with  that 
of  my  specimens  from  the  Gulf,  that  I  cannot  but  think 
they  should  be  united.  The  slightly  lower  number  of  scale 
rows  (38,  39)  round  the  body,  as  shewn  in  three  specimens 
of  their  series,  would  be  accounted  for  by  local  variation, 
or  perhaps  the  difference  in  our  methods  of  counting. 

Hydrophis  gracilis  (Shaw). 

Hydrophis  gracilis,  Boiilenger,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  280 
(1896)" ;  idem,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.  Kept,  and  Batr.,  p.  191  (1912)  ;  N. 
de  Rooij,  Kept.  Ind.  Aust.  Archipel.,  II,  p.  228  (1917)  ;  Wall,  Journ. 
Bombay  Nat.  Hist.  Soc.  XXV,  p.  602  (1918). 

Disteira  gracilis,  Stejneger,  Herpet.  Japan,  p.  427  (1907). 

Distira  gracilis.  Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II  (8),  p.  198 
(1909). 

Hydrophis  rostralis,  Smith,  Journ.  Nat.  Hist.  Soc.  Siam,  II,  p. 
340  (1917). 

Straits  of  Malacca,  9  exs  ;  Gulf  of  Siam,  1  ex. 

I  believe  now  that  my  H.  rostralis  is  only  a  gracilis  after 
all.  I  was  mislead  in  the  first  instance  by  the  large  number 
of  body  scales  (35  to  41)  which  I  found  in  my  series,  the 


1920.]  Dr.  Maixolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  27 

accredited  count  for  gracilis  being  29  to  33.  Since  then  I 
have  obtained  a  specimen  having  33,  and  Wall  has  also 
published  an  account  of  a  large  series  of  gracilis  obtained 
on  the  Indian  coast  (Journ.  Bombay,  Nat.  Hist.  Soc.  1.  c.  s.). 
His  maximum  is  only  33,  but  his  count  is  made  at. mid-body, 
and  I  find  on  counting  my  own  specimens  at  that  point,  an 
allowance  of  from  2  to  4  scales  may  be  made  for  the 
difference  in  position. 

This  brings  them  much  nearer  to  my  own  specimens, 
and  as  there  appears  to  be  no  other  character  by  which  they 
can  be  separated,  I  unite  them.  Wall's  series  is  a  fine  one 
of  36  examples,  and  should  be  fairly  representative  of  the 
locality  (Madras).  After  allowing  for  all  discrepancies  in 
our  method  of  counting,  however,  there  still  remains  a  con- 
siderable difference  between  his  series  and  mine  with  regard 
to  the  number  of  scales  round  the  neck  and  body.  I  tenta- 
tively define  the  two  forms  as  follows  : — 

Madras  Coast. 

17 — 19  round  the  neck  ;  29 — 37  round  the  body.  Ven- 
trals,  215—297.     Av.  251. 

Malay  Peninsula  and  Gulf  of  Siam. 

19 — 23  round  the  neck  ;  33 — 41  round  the  body.  Ven- 
trals,  250— 302.     Av.  279. 

Two  races  appear  to  be  clearly  indicated,  but  with  the 
type  locaUty  of  this  snake  unknown,  it  would  be  as  well  to 
know  something  about  the  forms  found  elsewhere  before 
proceeding  to  name  them. 

Variation. — The  variation  in  my  specimens  is  as 
follows : — Eye  equal  to  or  slightly  less  than  its  distance  from 
tlie  mouth  ;  rostral  as  broad  as  high  or  a  Uttle  broader  than 
high,  the  portion  visible  above  equal  to  three-quarters  or  the 
entire  length  of  the  internasal  suture  ;  frontal  usually 
shorter  than  its  distance  to  the  rostral  ;  five  or  six  suprala- 
bials,  in  one  example  only  the  fourth  shield  touching  the 
eye.  Fragmentation  of  the  supralabials  does  not  occur  in 
any  example,  nor  are  there  any  small  scales  interposed 
between  the  infralabials. 

Colour,  (in  alcohol).  Pale  bluish-grey  on  the  upper 
half  of  the  body,  yellowish  or  whitish  on  the  lower,  the 
young  with  indistinct  darkish  dorsal  bars  or  complete  bands. 
Head  grey,  yellowing  with  age. 

No.  1105  has  55  bands  upon  the  body,  about  as  broad 
as  their  interspaces  on  the  sides  of  the  body,  slightly  dilated 
dorsally  and  ventrally  ;  on  the  posterior  part  of  the  body 
they  are  very  indistinct.     Tail  grey,  blackish  at  the  tip. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  5  ;  palatine,  8  ;  ptery- 
goid, 10 — 12  ;  mandibular,  13  (3  specimens  examined). 

The  type  of  my  original  H.  rostralis  is  No.  1102,  in  the 
Selangor  Museum,  Kuala  Lumpor. 

Hydrophis  viperina  (Schmidt). 

Distira  viperina,  Bouleng.,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  298  (1896)  ; 
Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II  (8),  p.  239  (1909). 


28  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

Hudrophis  viperinus,  N.  de  Rooij,  Kept.  Ind.  Aust.  Archipet. 
il,  p.  ^31  C1917). 

Gulf  of  Siam,  17  exs.  Cap  St.  Jacques,  Cochin  China, 
2  exs. 

One  of  the  specimens  was  seen  to  fall  from  the  claws 
of  a  fishing  eagle,  and  was  picked  up  still  alive  and  quite 
undamaged  at  some  distance  inland.  This  incident  possibly 
explains  the  records  of  sea  snakes  which  have  been  occa- 
sionally discovered  at  a  considerable  distance  from  their 
natural  habitat.* 

For  a  small  series,  mine  shew  a  wide  range  in  the 
number  of  scale  rows.  They  vary  from  27  to  34  at  the 
neck  and  from  37  to  50  round  the  body.  Ventrals  181  to 
264.  A  reference  to  the  table  will  show  that  the  extremely 
low  ventral  count  of  181  is  confined  to  a  single  individual. 
No.  2716.  But  for  this  specimen  the  variation  in  the 
number  of  these  shields  would  be  232—264,  a  range  which 
is  almost  exactly  in  accordance  with  what  has  been  already 
given  by  Boulenger  and  Wall.  It  is  an  excellent  example 
of  the  abnormality  in  ventral  shields  to  which  I  have  refer- 
red in  the  preliminary  remarks. 

As  shewn  by  the  table,  the  two  specimens  from  Cochin 
China  have  a  higher  body  count  than  any  found  in  the  Gulf. 

Colouration. — Grey  above,  white  below,  with  from  28 
to  34  dark  grey  dorsal  rhombs  which  are  usually  confluent 
vertebrally.  My  one  juvenile  is  beautifully  and  con- 
spicuously marked,  but  with  age  the  pattern  becomes 
obscured,  and  in  some  individuals  has  entirely  disappeared, 
leaving  the  back  of  a  uniform  grey  colour,  which  is 
separated  from  the  white  of  the  belly  by  a  clear  line  of 
demarcation. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  5  ;  palatine,  7  or  8  ; 
pterygoid,  14  to  17  ;  mandibular,  17  (4  specimens 
examined) . 

Hydrophis  jerdonii  (Gray); 

Hydrophis  jerdonii,  Giinther,  Rept.  Brit.  Ind.,  p.  362  (1864)  ; 
Bouleng.,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  299  (1896)  ;  idem,  Fauna  Malay 
Pen.,  Rept.  and  Batr.,  p.  186  (1912)  ;  N.  de  Rooij,  Rept.  Ind.  Aust. 
Archipel.,  II,  p.  232  (1917). 

Distira  jerdonii.  Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II  (8),  p.  241 
(1909). 

Singgora,  3  exs. 

Variation. — The  anterior  temporal  reaches  the  labial 
margin  on  both  sides  in  one  example,  and  on  one  side  in 
another.  Chin-shields  well  developed  (as  figured  by 
Giinther,  pi.  XXV,  fig.  B),  in  all  three  examples.      Wall 


*  That  numbers  of  sea  snakes  fall  victim  to  birds  of  prey,  was 
once  demonstrated  to  me  on  visiting  a  large  flat-topped  buoy  lying 
some  miles  out  to  sea  in  the  Bight  of  Bandon.  The  top  of  this 
structure  was  covered  with  the  dried  bodies  of  snakes — chiefly 
Enhijdris  hnrcfyvickii — the  birds  having  brought  their  victims 
there,  and  i'.fter  devourin,'  the  internal  organs,  left  the  remainder 
to  be  disposed  of  by  the  elements. 


1920.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  29 

states  that  in  17  individuals  examined  by  him,  three  infrala- 
bials  only  were  in  contact  with  the  chin-shields.  All  my 
specimens  have  four,  the  first  three  in  contact  with  the 
anterior  pair. 

Colour. — ^The  adult  is  light  greyish  above,  yellowish- 
white  below,  with  50  broad  black  dorsal  bars  which  are  in- 
distinctly carried  round  the  body  as  narrow  bands.  The 
young  have  the  back  pale  olivaceous,  and  the  bands  (40  and 
48)  more  distinct  below.  Head  pale  olive  with  a  dark  mark 
on  the  snout. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  8 — 9  ;  palatine,  9  ; 
pterygoid,  14 — 15  ;  mandibular,  19 — 20  (2  specimens 
examined) . 

Thalassophis  anomalus  Schmidt. 

Thalassophis  anomalus,  Schmidt,  Abb.  Naturw.  Hamb.,  II, 
1852,  p.  81,  pi.  4  ;  Bouleng.,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  269  (1896)  ;  Smith, 
Journ.  Nat.  Hist.  Soc.  Slam,  II,  p.  176,  pi.  (1916)  ;  Ouwens,  De  voor- 
naamste  giftslangen  van  nederlandsch  oost-indie  (1916))  ;  N.  de 
Rooij,  Kept.  Ind.  Aust.  Archlpel.,  II,  p.  223  (1917). 

I  have  now  examined  17  examples  of  this  snake,  all 
obtained  from  various  localities  at  the  head  of  the  Gulf. 

The  following  points  may  be  added  to  my  recent 
description.  The  eye  may  be  slightly  greater  than  its 
distance  from  the  mouth.  27  to  30  scales  round  the  neck, 
31  to  35,  usually  33,  round  the  body.     Ventrals  218  to  256. 

The  young  may  have  a  pale  band  across  the  snout  and 
extending  along  either  side  of  the  head  to  join  the  white 
of  the  under  surface. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  5  ;  palatine,  7  ;  ptery- 
goid, 20  to  22 ;  mandibular,  18  or  19  (2  specimens 
examined) . 

Ouwen's  coloured  illustration  of  this  species  is  not  very 
representative  of  my  specimens.  The  body  is  too  elongate 
and  the  bars  are  much  too  dark. 

Thalassophis  annandalei  (Laidlaw). 

Distira  annandalei,  Laidlaw,  P.  Z.  S.,  1901,  ii,  p.  579,  pi.  xxxv, 
fig.  1. 

Thalassophis  annandalii,  Boulenger,  Fascic.  Malay,  Zool.  i,  p. 
16  (1903)  ;  idem,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  p.  195  (1912)  ;  Wall,  Mem. 
Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  ii,  (8),  p.  245  (1909)  ;  N.  de  Rooij,  Kept.  Ind.  Aust. 
Archipel.,  II,  p.  223  (1917). 

Cap  St.  Jacques,  Cochin  China,  7  exs.  ;  Singgora,  1  ex. 

In  cranial  and  in  external  characters  this  species  differs 
so  much  from  the  genotype,  T.  anomalus,  that  the  mere 
presence  of  a  pair  of  internasals  seems  insufficient  reason 
for  placing  them  together.  As  a  matter  of  fact,  in  one  of 
my  specimens  these  shields  are  almost  entire,  as  is  usual 
with  Hydrophis,  while  in  the  others  they  are  variously 
divided,  and  it  would  seem  more  correct  to  consider  them 
as  subject  to  irregular  fragmentation,  as  has  already  been 
done  with  the  other  head  shields. 


30  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

When  the  anatomy  of  the  Hydrophids  comes  to  be 
better  known,  a  considerable  regrouping  of  many  of  the 
species  will  surely  be  necessary.  T.  annandalei  should  then, 
I  think,  be  placed  by  itself  ;  until  this  is  done  it  may  as 
well  remain  where  it  is. 

The  variation  in  my  series  is  as  follows  : — Nasal  shields 
usually  divided,  either  longitudinally  or  transversely,  into 
4,  6,  or  8  pieces  ;  praefrontals  usually  divided  into  3,  4  or  5 
pieces  ;  frontal  and  supraoculars  entire  ;  parietals  separated 
from  each  other,  and  sometimes  from  the  frontal,  by  small 
scales  ;  supralabials  irregularly  divided,  sometimes  entire  ; 
anterior  chin-shields  well  developed  in  1  example  (No. 
3888) ,  absent  in  all  the  others. 

62  to  73  scales  round  the  neck,  74  to  91  round  the  body, 
ventrals  320  to  368. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  6  ;  palatine,  8  ;  ptery- 
goid, 20  ;  mandibular,  16  (1  specimen  examined). 

The  type  locality  of  this  snake  is  Patani,  and  the 
specimens  from  there  are  said  to  have  from  90  to  100  scales 
round  the  body.  As  will  be  seen  by  the  annexed  table, 
none  of  my  series  has  so  large  a  number. 

Enhydrina  valakadyn  (Boie). 

Enhydrina  valakadien,  Bouleng.,  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  p.  302  (1896)  ; 
idem.  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Rept.  and  Batr.,  p.  193  (1912). 

Enhydrina  valakadyn,  Stejneyer,  Herpet.  Japan,  p.  437  (1907)  ; 
Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II  (8),  p.  191  (1909)  ;  N.  de  Rooij, 
Rept.  Ind.  Aust.  Archipel.,  II,  p.  221  (1917)  ;  idem,  J.  Bombay 
N.  H.  S.,  XXVI,  p.  803  (1919). 

Enhydrina  valakadyn  is  one  of  the  most  widely  dis- 
tributed, and  without  doubt  the  most  common,  of  all  the 
sea  snakes.  It  has  also  been  accorded  a  greater  range  of 
variation  in  the  number  of  its  scale  rows  (40  to  60  round 
the  neck,  50  to  70  round  the  body) ,  than  any  other  known 
species. 

This  is  true,  but  only  when  the  species  is  considered 
as  a  whole,  and  without  regard  to  the  region  whence  the 
individuals  have  come.  The  very  large  series  that  I  have 
been  able  to  examine  from  the  Malayan  region  shews  that 
the  variation  in  any  one  locality  is  considerably  less — about 
12  to  14 — or,  if  the  sexes  are  considered  apart,  seldom  more 
than  ten.  The  number  of  specimens  that  I  have  seen  from 
the  Indian  coasts  is  not  great,  but  in  so  far  as  they  go  they 
agree  entirely  with  the  Malayan  examples  in  this  respect. 

I  gather  also  from  these  Indian  specimens,  that  the 
maximum  average  number  of  scale  rows  obtains  in  that 
region  ;  and  I  find  too  that  in  the  disposition  of  certain  head 
shields  they  differ  from  the  Malayan  form. 

Tentatively,  therefore,  I  recognize  two  forms,  wliich 
are  as  follows  : — 

An  Indian  form. 
Forma  valakadyn  (type  locality,  Tranquebar).     45  to 
60  scales  round  the  neck,  55  to  70  round  the  body  ;  ventrals, 


1920.]  Dr.  Maixolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes.  31 

240  to  320  ;  praef rentals  usually  in  contact  with  the  supra- 
labials,  3rd  and  4th  labials  usually  touching  the  eye. 

Habitat.  Arabian  Sea  and  coasts  of  the  Indian  Penin- 
sula. 

A  Malayan  form. 

40  to  55  scales  round  the  neck,  49  to  66  round  the  body  ; 
ventrals  239  to  292  ;  praefrontals  usually  not  in  contact  with 
the  supralabials  (80%),  fourth  labial  only  touching  the 
eye  (60f^c). 

Habitat.  Coasts  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Siam  and 
Cochin  China. 

With  this  latter  form  I  am  able  to  deal  ver\'  fuUy. 
Altogether  I  have  examined  about  140  examples  ;  60  of 
these  are  from  the  Straits  of  Malacca,  and  the  remainder 
from  the  seas  East  of  the  Peninsula. 

It  is  possible,  if  one  cares  to  go  more  closely  into 
detail,  to  separate  this  form  again,  the  dividing  line  between 
them  being  the  Peninsula.  As,  however,  they  differ  only 
In  a  slight  variation  in  the  number  of  body  scales  without 
alteration  in  the  head  shields,  it  is  preferable  to  consider 
them  together.     The  actual  variation  is  as  follows  : — 

Straffs  of  Malacca. 

43 — 55  round  the  neck,  52 — 66  round  the  body.  Ven- 
trals, 239—278. 

Gulf  of  Sum. 

40 — 52  round  the  neck,  49 — 62  round  the  body.  Ven- 
trals, 239—292. 

In  the  whole  series  the  praefrontals  fail  to  touch  the 
supralabials  in  112  examples.  In  nearly  every  instance  this 
occurs  on  both  sides.  In  the  same  series  the  4th  labial  only 
touches  the  eye  in  85. 

Females  on  the  average  have  from  3  to  4  more  scale 
rows  round  the  nedc  and  body  than  males.  I  find  the  sexual 
variation  as  follows  : — 

Straits  of  Malacca. — Males,  13 — 18  (av.  45)  round 
the  neck,  52—60  (av.  55)  round  the  body,  ventrals,  239 — 
270.  Females,  45 — 55  (av.  49)  round  thQ  neck,  54 — 63 
(av.  59)  round  the  body,  ventrals,  248 — 278. 

Gulf  of  Siam. — ^Males,  40 — 48  (av,  43)  round  the  nedt, 
49—59  (av.  53)  round  the  bodv,  ventrals,  243—292  (av. 
264).  Females,  42—52  (av.  46)  round  the  neck,  51—62 
(av.  56)  round  the  body,  ventrals,  239—287  (av.  260). 

Abnormalities  in  this  form  are  not  uncommon,  and 
such  faults  in  development  as  partially  divided  frontals, 
fusion  of  the  frontals  with  praefrontals,  of  oculars  with 
labials,  and  oculars  with  each  other,  occur  frequently. 
Fragmenlation  of  the  parietals  to  f0rm  a  small  interparietal 
occurs  in  about  50<^r. 


32  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Colour. — The  colour  of  specimens  from  this  region 
presents  nothing  that  has  not  ah-eady  been  described.  Four 
individuals,  however,  deserve  comment.  No.  2045,  although 
adult,  is  still  marked  with  narrow  jet  black  dorsal  bars  in 
the  posterior  three-quarters  of  the  body.  Nos.  2047,  2048, 
3856  have  a  broad  black  irregular  band  along  either  side  of 
the  body,  a  narrow  ventral  band,  and  irregular  black  dorsal 
spots.     All  three  are  from  the  same  locality. 

Distribution. — On  both  coasts  of  the  Malay  Peninsula 
this  form  is  extremely  common.  At  the  head  of  the  Gulf 
it  is  somewhat  less  numerous  ;  along  the  East  coast  of  the 
Gulf  it  is  comparatively  rare,  and  beyond  Cap  St.  Jacques  it 
has  not  yet  been  recorded. 

Breeding. — Young  are  born  in  the  Gulf  in  March  and 
April.  Until  recently  I  had  never  seen  more  than  5  embryos 
to  any  female.  Last  year,  however,  I  obtained  one  with  18, 
five  in  one  oviduct  and  thirteen  in  the  other. 

Dentition. — Posterior  maxillary,  3  ;  palatine,  6 — 7  ; 
pterygoid,  14 — 17  ;  mandibular,  15 — 16  (9  specimens 
examined) . 

Enhydris  hardwickii  (Gray) . 

Enhudris  hardwickii,  Bouleng.  Cat.  Sn.  B.  M.,  Ill,  p.  301  (1896) ; 
idem,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Kept,  and  Batr.,  p.  193  (1912)  ;  Wall, 
Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  II  (8),  p.  247  (1909)  ;  Smith,  Journ. 
Bombay  N.  H.  S.,  XXIII,  p.  787  (1915)  ;  Ouwens,  De  voornaamste 
giftslangen  van  Nederlandsch  oost-indie,  pi.  Ill  (1916). 

Lapemis  hardwickii,  Stejneger,  Herpet.  Japan,  pp.  401  and  435 
(1907). 

This  is  a  common  species  in  the  Gulf  of  Siam  and  along 
the  coast  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  and  I  have  been  able  to 
examine  a  large  series.  I  have  specimens  also  from  Cap 
St.  Jacques,  Cochin  China,  and  no  doubt  it  extends  north- 
wards up  the  coast  of  Annam,  as  it  is  said  to  be  common 
along  the  Western  shores  of  Luzon.  Males  appear  to  be 
far  more  numerous  than  females,  the  proportion  in  my 
series  being  three  to  one. 

In  the  number  of  scales  round  the  body,  the  range  given 
by  Boulenger  is  certainly  too  limited,  particularly  in  the 
number  round  the  middle  of  the  body.  My  specimens 
shew  a  much  greater  variation,  and  in  this  respect  are  more 
in  accordance  with  the  figures  given  by  Wall.  The  species 
is  so  distinct  that  it  cannot  be  confused  with  any  other  form. 

Sexual  variation  is  well  marked,  the  males  having  the 
lower  count  both  in  body  scales  and  ventrals.  Specimens 
from  the  West  Coast  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  do  not  appear 
to  differ,  either  in  scalation  or  in  colouration  from  those 
found  in  Siamese  waters. 

The  following  table  is  drawn  up  from  about  230  ex- 
amples : —  • 

Males. 
Round  the  neck  :--23  to  29,  usually  25  to  27."    Round 
the  body  :— 25  to  35,  usually  27  to  33.     Ventrals  :— 114  to 
152. 


1120.]  Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  S^fl  Sna/res.  33 

Females. 

Round  the  neck  :— 27  to  35  (usually  29  to  33) .  Round 
the  body  :— 33  to  41  (usually  35  to  37) .  Ventrals  :— 141  to 
230.^ 

That  marked  sexual  variation  existed  in  this  species 
was  observed  long  ago  by  Boettger  in  working  on  Philippine 
specimens,  (Zool.  Anz./p.  395,  1888),  but  his  observations 
seem  to  have  been  overlooked  by  most  authors  in  writing 
since. 

Boettger's  remarks  apply  chiefly  to  the  ventral  shields, 
and  the  figures  he  gives  (I  quote  3tejneger,  p.  401)  are  135 — 
168  for  males,  186 — 237  for  females.  I  cannot  but  think 
that  had  he  worked  on  a  larger  series — he  had  only  31 
specimens — the  difference  which  he  found  between  the 
sexes  would  have  been  less  marked.  Apart  from  this,  his 
figures,  both  in  range  and  average,  are  considerably  higher 
than  what  is  recorded  by  any  other  author  for  this  species. 
It  looks  indeed  as  if  the  Phillipine  form  differed  from  the 
others,  although  it  is  possibly  due  to  the  different  method 
employed  in  counting  these  scales.^ 

Colour. — Greenish  or  yellowish  olive  above,  whitish 
below,  with  from  35  to  50  dark  grey  or  olive  dorsal  bars, 
tapering  to  a  point  on  the  sides.  Variations  to  this  are 
frequent.  The  dorsal  bars  may  be  continued  round  tlie 
body  as  complete  bands,  a  form  seen  most  frequently  in 
juveniles.  A  narrow  black  ventral  stripe  is  sometimes 
present,  or  less  frequently,  a  broad  irregular  ventral  band. 
Coalescence  of  the  dorsal  bars  occurs  in  adults,  and  in 
some  the  entire  back  is  of  one  uniform  colour.  One  speci- 
men (No.  2460)  is  uniform  slate  grey  throughout.  Young 
ones  have  the  head  black,  with  or  without  yellow  markings 
across  the  snout  and  along  the  sides  of  the  head. 

Specimens  from  Koh  Kong  are,  as  a  series,  greyer  and 
darker  than  those  from  the  head  of  the  Gulf,  and  are  more 
prone  to  have  ventral  stripes  and  bars. 

Ouwen's  coloured  figure  is  an  excellent  representation 
of  many  examples  found  at  the  head  of  the  Gulf. 

Variation. — Fission  of  the  second  supralabial  to  form 
a  pseudo-loreal  is  not  uncommon.  41  scales  round  the  body 
occurs  in  2  examples  only,  and  in  one  of  these  (No.  3883), 
the  ventral  count  is  230,  the  next  number  in  sequence  to  it 
being  203  (No.  1391). 


'  Ventral  counts  are  very  tedious,  and  the  figures  given  here 
are  drawn  mainly  from  specimens  obtained  in  the  Gulf  of  Siam. 

"The  ventral  shields  of  Enhijdris  are  very  irregular  in  their 
disposition,  sometimes  being  broken  up,  with  odd  scales  interposed 
here  and  there,  sometimes  missing  altogether.  The  method  I  have 
used  has  been  to  control  the  count  by  means  of  the  adjacent  row 
of  body  scales,  which,  being  uniform  in  their  sequence,  indicate 
what  the  correct  ventral  count  should  be.   • 


34  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

The  ventral  spines  of  the  males  appear  to  be  longer 
and  larger  in  individuals  from  the  head  of  the  Gulf,  than  in 
those  from  any  other  locality  1  have  examined.  Possibly, 
being  a  sexual  character,  they  increase  in  size  in  the  breed- 
ing season. 

Dentition.— Posterior  maxillary,  4  to  6* ;  palatine,  6  or 
7  ;  pterygoid,  17  to  20  ;  mandibular,  14  or  15  (9  specimens 
examined) . 

Breeding. — In  the  Gulf  young  are  born  in  April  and 
May,  from  2  to  5  being  produced.  In  length  they  vary 
from  250  to  300  mm. 

Aipysurus  eydouxii  (Gray). 

Aipiisnriis  eudoiixii,  Boulenger,  Fauna  Malay  Pen.,  Rept.  and 
Batr.,  p."  195  (1912)  ;  Wall,  Mem.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  ii  (8),  p.  189 
(1909)  N.  de  Rooij,  Rept.  Ind.  Aust.  Anhipol.  TT.  i).  219  (1917). 

Gulf  of  Siam,  11  exs. 

In  three  examples  the  praefrontal  is  divided  ;  in  one 
the  3rd  and  4th  supralabials  touch  the  eye  on  both  sides. 
The  ventral  keel  is  variable  ;  in  four  examples  it  is  poorly 
developed  ;  in  three  others  each  keel  in  the  fore-part  of  the 
body  bears  a  strong  spinose  tubercle,  and  there  is  a  series 
of  small  tubercles  along  the  adjacent  row  of  body  scales 
for  nearly  the  same  distance. 

One  specimen  was  caught  some  20  feet  above  high 
water  mark,  and  in  life  had  a  rich  slate-blue  irridescence. 

Colour. — Yellowish,  with  from  44   to   55   dark  olive 

dorsal  bars,  which  taper  to  a  point  on  the  sides  and  are 

usually  confluent  vertebrally.  Head  dark   olive  ;   entirely 
black  in  the  young. 


*  Boulenger  in  his  description  of  this  genus,  gives  the  number 
of  teeth  behind  the  poison  fangs  as  from  2  to  4.  I  cannot  find  any 
of  my  specimens  with  less  than  4, 


1920. 


Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  -Sea  Snaket 


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Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Seainakes 


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1920.] 


Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes. 


43 


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Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes. 


45 


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1920. 


Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes. 


47 


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1920. 


Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes. 


49 


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1920. 


Dr.  Malcolm  Smith  :  Sea  Snakes. 


53 


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Journ.  F.  M.  S.  Mus.  Vol.  X 


Plate  I 


A.         Hydpophis  lamberti.  From  the  type. 


B 


B 


B.         Hydrophis  klossi.  No.  1189. 


C.         Hydrophis  eonsobrinus.  From  the  type. 


C.  L.  Grounduater  del. 


II.     ON  A  COLLECTION  OF  PLANTS  FROM 

PENINSULAR  SIAM. 

By  H.  N.  Ridley,  C.M.G.,  F.R.S. 

The  plants  dealt  with  in  this  paper  were  collected  by 
the  Federated  Malay  States  Museums  during  a  general 
biological  expedition,  extending  from  January  to  March 
1919,  to  the  Islands  and  West  Coast  of  Peninsular  Siam 
between  Lat.  7  and  Lat.  UN. 

Hitherto  very  little  collecting  has  been  done  in  this 
area  though  Mr.  C.  Curtis  collected  at  one  time  in  Puket, 
Trang  and  Pangnga  while  Renong  has  long  been  a  favourite 
centre  for  orchid  collectors.  North  of  this  region  lie  the 
Mergui  Archipelago  and  Tenasserim,  the  floras  of  which 
were  extensively  collected  by  Griffith  and  Heifer.^ 

The  typical  lowland  Malayan  flora,  that  of  the  dense 
wet  forests  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  disappears  rapidly  as  we 
reach  the  dryer  regions  of  Kedah,  Setul  and  Perlis,  where 
it  is  replaced  largely  by  South  Burmese  and  Siamese  plants  ; 
as  we  go  still  further  north  Malayan  plants  become  again 
fewer  but  it  is  clear  that  many  have  contrived  to  push  their 
way  through  the  dryer  regions  into  the  northern  parts  of 
Peninsular  Siam  and  into  Tenasserim. 

Two  instances  in  the  present  collection  are 
Pentaphragma  begoniaefolia  and  Cyrtandra  bicolor,  both 
of  wmch  find  their  furthest  limit  here.  Well  represented 
in  southern  Malaya  the  species  of  these  two  genera  become 
more  scanty  the  further  north  we  go  until  they  disappear 
in  this  region. 

The  coUection  is  remarkably  strong  in  Acanthaceae 
with  one  new  genus,  and  a  number  of  new  species. 

Acanthaceae  are  comparatively  rare  in  the  southern 
Malay  Peninsula  becoming  more  abundant  in  the  dryer 
northern  region.  The  occurrence  so  far  north  of  Thottea 
(Aristolochiaceae)  and  of  the  common  southern 
Bromheadia  palustris  (Orchidaceae)  in  Takuapa,  its  most 
northern  limit,  are  important  extensions  of  range. 

Among  the  most  interesting  novelties  are  the  fine 
Capparis  Klossii ;  Eloeocarpus  tectonaefolius,  only  allied 
to  a  Javanese  species  ;  the  stiff -leaved  Canthium  trachy- 
style  ;  Vallaris  macrantha,  with  unusually  large  leaves  and 
flowers  for  the  genus  ;  the  new  genus  of  Acanthaceae, 
Antheliacanthiis,  remarkable  for  its  small  almost  regular 
corolla  ;  Xyris  tuberosa,  with  its  remarkable  rhizome  of 
globose  joints  ;  and  Carex  mapanifolia,  with  its  dense 
spikes  and  broad  leaves,  allied  to  C.  Helferi  of  Tenasserim 
and  C.  scaposa  of  China  and  Cochin-China. 

I  Dr.  A,  Keith  collected  in  Bangtaphan,  South-western  Siam  (between 
the  latitudes  of  Renong  and  Mergui)  in  1890-1,  and  his  specimens  form  part 
of  the  material  on  which  are  based  Mr.  Ridley's  botanical  papers  in  the 
"Journal  of  the  Straits  Branch  Royal  Asiatic  Society,"  No.  59,  July  1911, 
pp,  15-234  [C.B.K]. 


66  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 


SOME  ACCOUNT  OF  THE  JOURNEY  ON  WHICH 

THE  PLANTS  WERE  COLLECTED. 

By  C.  BoDEN  Kloss. 

All  the  islands  mentioned  below  are  near  that  part  of 
the  west  coast  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  which  is  here  called 
Peninsular  Siam,  i.e.,  that  portion  south  of  the  pass  across 
the  Isthmus  of  Kra  between  the  head  of  the  Pakchan  Estuary 
and  Chumporn  Town  and  north  of  the  borders  of  the  Malay 
States  of  Perils,  Kedah,  Perak  and  Kelantan. 

We^  arrived  at  Pulau^  Mohea  from  Penang  on  February 
1st,  1919,  and  left  on  the  3rd. 

The  north  and  south  islands  are  each  about  a  square 
mile  in  area  and  between  500  and  800  feet  high  and  are 
separated  from  each  other  by  a  narrow  channel.  They  lie 
in  about  7°  13'  N,  some  18  miles  west  of  the  coastal  island 
of  Telibon  which  protects  tlie  mouth  of  the  Trang  River. 

From  its  south-east  point  west-about  to  its  northern 
end  the  south  island  is  steep-to,  its  western  side  consisting 
mainly  of  high  precipitous  cliffs  :  to  the  east  and  south 
it  slopes  fairly  gently  and  along  these  shores  are  several 
sand  beaches  with  broad  reefs  in  front.  The  northern 
island  is  lower  and  apparently  consists  of  three  hills  sloping 
to  the  S.E.  and  joined  by  sandy  necks  :  all  along  its  south 
and  south-east  sides  is  a  sand  beach  and  reefs  :  the  west 
and  north  sides  are  high  and  steep  and  there  are  a  couple 
of  rocky  coves. 

The  islands  were  exceedingly  dry  and  there  were  no 
flowers  but  some  fairly  big  timber,  wild  bananas, 
Licualas  ( ?)  and  Caryota  palms.  They  are  largely  forested 
on  their  eastern  sides. 

The  only  water  found  was  in  two  little  soaks  on  the 
south  island :  the  western  seemed  stagnant,  the  northern  was 
running  in  the  sand.  The  sea  round  the  islands  is  beauti- 
fully clear  and  fish  were  numerous  :  there  is  a  fine  coral 
reef  in  the  channel.  There  are  no  inhabitants  but  the 
islands  are  visited  occasionally. 

We  lay  at  anchor  off  the  south-east  entrance  of  the 
channel  in  8  fathoms.  Vessels  should  approach  no  nearer 
for  even  in  4  and  5  fathoms  there  are  coral  heads  which 
show  above  water  at  low  tide.  A  passage  through  the 
Strait  could  be  made  with  care  by  keeping  nearest  the 
south  side. 

North  of  Pulau  Mohea  are  some  islets — the  Pilgrims 
and  Koh  Ma.  The  former  are  of  limestone  ;  the  largest, 
shaped  like  a  boot,  has  some  grass  and  shrubs.  Koh  Ma  is 
apparently  of  sandstone  and  is  largely  covered  with  vegeta- 
tion. 

2  Mr.  H.  C.  Robinson,  Director  of  Museums  and  Fisheries.  F.M.S. ,  and 
myself  with  a  party  of  collectors  in  the  Fisheries  launch  "  Shark." 

3  Pulau  (Malay)  =  Koh  (Siamese)  =  Island. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  67 

We  passed  these  on  February  3rd  on  our  way  north 
to  Koh  Pipidon  situated  in  lat.  7°  46'  N  and  about  13  miles 
from  the  mainland  and  20  miles  from  Junk  Seylon  to  the 
west.  It  is  the  largest  of  the  Vogels,  high  and  wooded, 
about  4  miles  long  and  two  broad.  There  is  a  deep  bay 
on  the  northern  side  and  another,  nearly  land-locked,  in  the 
north-west  coast  (not  shown  on  the  charts).  Tliese  are 
separated  from  each  other  by  a  narrow  nock  of  land  which 
connects  together  the  two  main  portions  of  the  island  lying 
east  and  west. 

South  of  Pipidon  is  Koh  Pipithall,  a  long  narrow,  nortli 
and  south  ridge  of  limestone  with,  apparently,  a  deep  fiord 
near  its  middle.  Many  of  its  summits  arc  rounded  but  its 
sides  are  precipitous  and  the  north  extremity  is  absolutely 
perpendicular. 

We  anchored  in  the  nortli-west  end  of  the  south  bay 
of  Koh  Pipidon  (also  known  as  Pulau  Bri-bri)  in  8  fathoms. 
The  western  part  of  the  island  is  a  long  ridge  of  limestone 
— like  Pipithall,  very  finely  coloured  white,  grey,  red,  brown, 
but  more  clothed  with  vegetation  ;  the  eastern  portion  is  of 
other  formation  with  more  gentle  and  forested  slopes.  The 
two  are  joined  by  a  neck  of  low  sandy  land  north  of  which 
is  the  newly-noted  bay  now  in  process  of  being  filled  up 
with  sand.  A  steep  limestone  mass  rises  to  the  north  of 
its  entrance  while  there  is  a  small  mangrove  swamp  inland 
at  its  south-western  head.  On  the  east  side  of  the  bay  the 
forest  is  very  thin  and  patchy. 

In  south  bay  beneath  the  limestone  cliffs  which  form  its 
western  side  is  a  flat  reef  of  sand  and  coral,  dry  at  low  tide, 
which  rises  fairly  steeply  :  the  head  of  the  bay  is  clean  white 
sand,  fairly  deep  ana  shelving  and  on  the  eastern  side  a 
steep- to  reef  juts  out  parallel  to  the  limestone  cliffs  for  some 
distance  :  anchorage  is  between  these  two. 

The  beach  which  runs  all  the  way  along  the  south  side 
is  of  fine  sand,  interrupted  in  two  or  three  places  by  out- 
crops of  rock.  East  of  the  first  of  these  lie  a  few  huts 
which  form  a  temporary  settlement  of  Sam-Sams  who  visit 
the  island  for  fishing  :  2-300  yds.  behind  the  hamlet  is  small 
well  of  bad  water  ;  this  was  the  only  water  we  found  on  the 
Island. 

In  the  forest  covering  the  flat  neck  were  numerous 
giant  CoUocasias  12—14  ft.  high  with  stems  a  foot  through  ; 
the  roots  are  used  as  food. 

The  mangrove  swamp  which  is  the  last  indication  of 
part  separation  of  the  east  and  west  higher  lands  is  filling 
up  like  the  north  bay  where  there  is  now  anchorage  for 
small  craft  only  under  its  north-east  point. 

The  wliole  island  was  very  dry  and  except  for  a  little 
Hlacnflower  woody  plant  {Pseaderanthemiim  creniilatnm) , 
the  only  blossoms  seen  were  in  the  beach  vegetation. 
Gycads,  Licualas  and  other  palms  are  common. 


68  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

With  easterly  winds  there  was  a  good  deal  of  swell  in 
the  south  bay  but  the  water  was  always  beautifully  clear — 
shiny  pale  green  over  sand  and  reefs,  darker  green  in  greater 
depths. 

On  the  6th  we  proceeded  to  Puket  in  Junk  Seylon  Island 
and  were  detained  there  until  the  10th  awaiting  arrival  of 
a  fresh  supply  of  coal  from  Penang,  but  the  hospitality  of 
Mr.  J.  F.  Johiis,  H.B.M.  Vice-Consul,  rendered  our  stay  very 
pleasant. 

On  the  10th  we  left  Puket  for  Pangnga  at  the  head 
of  the  Gulf  of  Junk  Seylon.  The  wind  was  fresh  but  sea 
quite  smooth  as  we  steamed  north  along  Palau  Panjang  a 
large  island  in  the  middle  of  the  Gulf.  Tharua  on  Junk 
Seylon,  which  we  soon  passed,  was  once  a  Portuguese  settle- 
ment. In  this  part  of  the  gulf'  there  are  only  two  limestone 
islets,  Pipi  and  Sot,  but  nearer  the  head  limestone  becomes 
dominant  and  is  wonderfully  picturesque  northwards  of 
Koh  Chanak.  It  occurs  as  islets  of  all  shapes  and  }  izes — 
icebergs,  towers,  spires,  clift's,  serrated  ridges,  roundec  hum- 
mocks and  overhanging  knobs — partially  covered  with 
greenery  but  showing  surfaces  of  white,  grey,  buflf,  red, 
brown  purple  and  slate,  while  the  sea  at  its  bases  lies  stiU 
and  deep,  dark  from  shade  and  reflections. 

At  the  head  of  the  Gulf  are  wide  shallows  whence  rise 
Koh  Mak,  a  low  island  which  is  a  guiding  mark  for  the 
mouth  of  the  Pangnga  River  and,  further  north-east,  two 
limestone  blocks  between  which  lies  the  course  to  Paklao. 
We  kept  on  northwards  passing  twenty  yards  west  of  the 
little  Pulau  Chetek  and,  stopping  for  a  minute  or  two  at 
2.20  p.m.  off  the  village  at  the  seaward  end  of  Pulau  Pungi 
to  engage  boats  for  the  journey  up  river  to  Pangnga  Town, 
entered  the  river  between  tall  limestone  peaks  and  anchored 
at  3.40  p.m.  off  the  customs  house.  Hereabouts  the  river 
runs  tlirough  mangroves  and  there  are  numerous  waterways 
but  many  great  limestone  masses  tower  above  the  swampy 
level  and  relieve  and  beautify  the  scene. 

On  the  11th  we  left  for  the  town  in  a  dugout,  some  of 
which  are  here  very  large  indeed.  It  took  about  an  hour 
and  a  half  to  reach  the  landing  place,  passing  all  the  while 
through  mangroves  above  which  rose  limestone  hills  like 
icebergs  from  a  sea.  One  of  these,  a  mile  or  more  north 
of  the  custom  house,  bears  a  likeness  to  an  elephant  and  is 
called  Koh  or  Kao  Chang — I  don't  know  which  :  the  one 
means  "  island "  and  the  other  "  hill "  and  both  would 
apply. 

At  the  landing  steps,  where  lay  several  small  cargo 
boats,  there  is  a  double  row  of  small  shops,  mostly  Chinese, 
and  the  road,  rough  but  partly  metalled,  runs  inland  half  a 
mile  till  it  meets  another  crossing  at  right  angles  ;  the  left 
branch  going  to  Kasom,  the  right  to  Pangnga  :  at  the  junc- 
tion is  the  Governor's  house  of  white-washed  stucco.  An 
attempt  has  been  made  at  an  avenue.    The  road  runs  first 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  69 

through  rice  fields  with  ckimps  and  hnes  of  Borassus  pahns 
and  then  turning  towards  the  left  traverses  undulating  coun- 
try for  a  couple  of  miles  before  reaching  the  town,  passing 
various  houses  and  huts  with,  on  the  right,  a  good  police 
barracks  in  a  line  grassed  enclosui'e  and  a  gaol  and,  on  the 
left,  a  post  and  telegraph  office. 

The  present  town  is  almost  entirely  of  wood  and  palm 
thatch  for  the  old  town  beyond  it  and  nearer  the  river  was 
burnt  down  about  a  year  ago  and  the  substantial  brick  walls 
and  cement  floors  are  all  that  remain — no  attempt  apparent- 
ly having  been  made  at  rebuilding. 

Beyond  the  old  site  lies  the  river — a  clear  shallow 
stream  in  a  very  broad  sandy  bed  probably  full  of  water  in 
the  summer  season.  The  further  side  is  fringed  with  a  tall 
feather-like  bamboo  concealing  houses  and  gardens  and 
beyond  rises  a  lofty  precipitous  range  of  limestone  which 
is  less  regularly  duplicated  on  a  smaller  scale  on  the  near 
side  of  the  stream.  Between  these  two  the  main  road  runs 
on  through  fruit  orchards  and  rice  fields  (divided  into  un- 
usually small  units)  to  Takuapa.  Where  the  town  street, 
which  is  only  a  branch,  joins  it  stands  a  wat  or  monastery 
in  charming  grounds. 

The  shrine  is  a  very  plain  building  with  an  iron  roof 
and  contained  three  well  gilt  images  :  to  the  large  central 
one  a  white  elephant  is  offering  a  bottle  of  beer  lifted  high 
in  its  trunk.  The  Abbott's  house  is  a  pleasant  attap  building 
and  there  is  also  a  good  wooden  bungalow  and  a  large  un- 
walled  shed,  while  scattered  about  in  the  shade  are  sitting- 
platforms.  Shady  trees,  red  acalyphas,  slender  areca  palms 
and  grass  lawns  make  a  pretty  foreground  to  the  limestone 
cliffs  which  shelter  the  spot.  The  Abbott  came  to  talk  with 
us  and  sent  us  glasses  of  tea  :  there  are  too  few  Siamese 
in  the  town  (the  population  of  which  is  largely  Chinese)  to 
supply  sufficient  novices  to  keep  the  wat  in  proper  condi- 
tion :  many  sick  people  were  refuging  with  him  (influenza) . 

Though  perhaps  I  expected  rather  more  after  reading 
Warington  Smyth's  description*  this  is  certainly  a  most 
charming  place,  especially  the  pretty  and  restful  wat.  One 
perhaps  looked  to  find  the  cliff's  rather  more  dominant  ;  but 
though  they  are  very  beautiful  and  striking  they  do  not 
overshadow  the  town. 

Fish,  vegetables  and  fruit  were  for  sale  and  one  or  two 
Indian  cloth-merchants  had  shops  :  there  is  now  no  rest- 
Iiouse.  On  tlie  road  ply  two-seated  gharries  drawn  by 
sturdy  little  Bandon  ponies  in  excellent  condition  wearing 
well-padded  collars  and  saddles. 

We  got  back  to  the  launch  at  2.30  p.m.,  coming  down 
at  dead  low  tide  with  many  sand  and  mud  banks  exposed 
along  the  edge  of  the  mangroves  :  in  the  fairway  there  are 
rocks  and  heavy  snags  at  one  or  two  places  so  if  small 

4  Vide  Five  Years  in  Siam,  Vol.  II,  p.  15  (1898)  In  this  book  the 
author  recounts  his  experiences  while  travelling  between  Trang  and  Chump- 
orn — the  area  dealt  with  in  this  note  (Vol.  I,  p,  314 — II,  p.  33). 


70  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums  [Vol.  X, 

vessels  attempted  to  proceed  above  the  Chapsi  (or  customs 
house)  they  sliould  do  so  with  great  care  and  local  pilotage. 
At  the  landing  place  is  a  small  wharf  and  a  stockyard  :  at 
the  customs  house  is  also  a  small  wharf  and  a  dozen  houses. 
Plenty  of  water  was  to  be  had  nearby  from  wells. 

We  left  at  sunrise,  the  early  rays  tinging  with  beautiful 
colours  the  limestone  hills  to  westwards  some  of  which 
come  sheer  down  into  the  river.  Coming  out  of  the  river 
mouth  Pulau  Fungi,  seen  end  on,  looked  like  a  huge  thumb 
sticking  out  of  the  water.  Behind  it  is  a  fiord-like  channel 
between  limestone  chff  s  which  leads  to  Kasom  but  the  usual 
way  is  more  to  the  westward  along  the  mangroves  as  runs 
the  route  to  Pangnga  to  the  east.  As  we  turned  west  into 
Pakra  or  Pak  Phra  Strait  between  Junk  Seylon  and  the 
mainland  we  got  our  last  view  of  the  weird  shapes  of  Koh 
Chanuk  and  the  adjacent  islets.  Some  of  them  have  been 
embraced  by  low  expansions  of  land  and  are  now  part  of 
the  Peninsula.  The  softer  hilly  scenery  of  the  Strait  is 
pretty — forest,  green  and  yeUow  grass  and  brown  burnt 
patches.  Most  of  tlie  bays  along  the  shores  are  shallow 
and  in  some  of  them  are  stretches  of  large  trees  growing 
in  the  sea  {?  Sonneratea  sp.).  There  are  many  fish  traps 
with  their  attendant  wings  of  stakes. 

At  the  point  where  the  road  and  telegraph  line  from 
Puket  reach  the  shore  there  are  some  houses  and  a  large 
sala  (rest  house)  :  also  here  and  there  along  the  shores  of 
the  strait  are  solitary,  or  little  collections  of,  houses  :  there 
are  a  few  coco-palms.  A  mile  or  two  from  the  western 
mouth  of  the  straits  we  stopped  to  get  a  pilot  off  a  pretty 
little  peninsula  with  a  police  station  and  some  shops  beneath 
tall  Casuarinas  and  Barringtonia  trees  and  a  fleet  of  boats 
anchored  behind  it. 

We  might  have  done  without  the  pilot  as  the  shoals  at 
the  mouth  could  be  distinguished  though  the  tide  was  high  : 
the  northern  bar  was  indicated  by  the  breakers  and  the 
southern,  which  is  outside  and  overlaps,  it,  was  to  be  located 
by  its  colour.  The  shores  of  the  exit  are  low  and  sandy 
and  lined  with  Casuarinas  and  thereafter,  until  the  hills 
forming  the  entrance  to  Klong  Bagatae  or  Tung  Pran  in 
Takuatung  were  reached,  we  steamed  in  beautiful  calm  blue 
water  along  a  practically  unbroken  sand  beach  fringed  with 
Casuarinas  and  backed  with  forest ;  at  intervals  passing 
houses  or  hamlets  with  boats  drawn  up  before  them  on  the 
shore. 

Lem^  Thom  Tjob  (Lat.  8°  33'  N.)  the  western  extremity 
of  the  long  point  sheltering  Klong  Bagatae,  is  500  ft.  high 
and  covered  with  wind-swept  forest :  a  reef  extends  outwards 
from  the  lower  northern  point.  On  the  opposite  side  of  the 
Klong  (river),  Lem  Lajan  to  the  eastward  is  hilly  with 
many  rocks  at  its  foot  but  thence  sand  and  Casuarinas  run 
southward  to  Ban''  Tapmo.  We  steamed  in  beyond  the 
last  to  look  for  a  good  collecting  shore  but  everj^vhere 

5    Cape.  6    Village. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  71 

higher  up  the  inlet  were  mangroves  and  sand  or  mud 
exposed  i^oals  apparently  blocking  up  much  of  the  shallow 
head  :  so  we  turned  back  and  anchored  in  5  fathoms 
a  mile  and  a  half  within  the  western  cape  near  a  little  beach 
and  some  coco-palms.  We  had  a  few  visitors — Malay- 
speaking  Sam  Sams. 

In  the  afternoon  I  walked  to  Lem  Lajan  which  is  on 
the  boundary  between  Takuatung,  in  which  we  were,  and 
Takuapa  to  the  north.  It  lies  about  Sy^  miles  north  of 
Ban  Tapmo  over  firm  sand  or  short  dry  gi'ass  among  the 
Casuarinas.  The  forest  behind  shaded  rather  thorny  under- 
growth :  many  of  the  trees  bore  orchids  but  their  flowering 
season  was  over  except  for  one  pale  crimson  species. 
Adjoining  the  hilly  country  south  of  Lem  Lajan  is  a  big 
sandy  lagoon  backed  by  mangroves  and  the  tide  was  pouring 
into  this  along  a  channel  through  the  beach  :  a  reef  with 
rocks  borders  the  shore. 

The  western  point  is  a  low  hill  covered  with  open 
forest  :  flowers  were  few,  the  most  conspicuous  being  a  pale 
pinkish-white  one  spotted  with  crimson,  borne  by  a  plant 
2-4  ft.  high  (Cystacanthiis  pnlcherrimas).  Fan  palms  and 
Licualas  were  common  and  several  species  of  orchids  were 
numerous  above  the  shore  rocks,  but  all  flowerless.  A 
swampy  depression  almost  cuts  off  the  point  and  seawards 
there  is  a  curious  mud  and  sand  lagoon  surrounded  by 
mangroves  and  littoral  vegetation.  Eastwards  on  the  main- 
land hills  rise  to  about  3,000  ft.  and  these  come  down  to  the 
sea  at  Lem  Lajan  and  northwards. 

Traps  with  lines  of  stakes  (Malay  blat  and  kelong) 
seem  to  be  the  only  form  of  fishing  practiced.  The  people 
of  the  village,  which  is  an  extensive  one,  kept  to  themselves. 

We  left  early  in  the  morning  of  the  16th  February. 

There  was  little  to  be  distinguished  for  some  time  as 
we  stood  well  off  to  clear  the  reefs.  Approaching  the 
secondary  or  middle  entrance  to  Takuapa  Inlet,  Pak  Kruen, 
its  southern  side  was  seen  to  be  slightly  hilly  and  in  part 
grass  grown.  Inland,  more  or  less  easterly,  a  fine  conical 
hill  or  small  mountain  stood  out  well.  The  island  north 
of  Pak  Kruen,  Koh  Pra  Tung,  is  quite  low  and  flat  with 
Casuarinas  along  its  seaward  beach.  Koh  Gab,  the  northern- 
most of  the  islands  forming  Takuapa  Inlet  is  separated  from 
the  last  by  a  very  narrow  entrance  where  the  water  showed 
pale  green  and  is  high  and  hilly  with  long  beaches  divided 
from  each  other  by  combs  of  rock  :  the  shore  is  backed  by 
Casuarinas  and  in  a  few  places  are  houses  or  little  hamlets  : 
the  northern  point,  Takuapa,  or  Kopah,  Head  (Lat.  9°  16' 
N.)  is  rocky  and  bordered  by  a  reef.  On  the  mainland 
opposite  are  small  forested  knolls  coming  down  to  the  sea 
and  then  a  long  low  stretch  with  Casuarinas  and  a  few 
houses  :  south  of  this  is  a  wide  inlet  and  south  again  the 
whole  Strait  seems  edged  with  mangroves.  There  are  many 
hills  and  ranges  inland,  some  of  those  visible  being  perhaps 
3  to  4,000  ft.  high,  as  is  one  near  the  sea  with  a  good  many 
sloping  rock  faces  on  its  south-west  side.     Within  the  north 


72  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  1  Vol.  X, 

point  of  Koh  Gah  is  a  fine  sand  beach  with  some  flat  grass 
land  and  Casuarinas  behind,  a  mangrove  swamp  and  some 
dense  scrub.  A  mile  or  two  farther  south,  concealed  by 
mangroves,  lay  a  small  Chinese  village  in  a  bight  between 
hills  whence  comes  an  excellent  stream  of  good  water  in  a 
rocky  bed.  The  hills  above  are  covered  with  penetrable 
forest  in  which  meander  paths  connecting  oil  trees  which 
after  tapping  are  caulked  with  bundles  of  soft  bark  jammed 
into  the  holes.  Here  in  the  hills  are  some  very  pretty  rocky 
water-holes  in  the  bed  of  the  stream  :  very  few  plants 
were  in  flower.  Near  the  mouth  of  the  stream  were  two  or 
three  houses  belonging  to  Chinamen  who  have  married 
Siamese  women  :  they  have  good  vegetable  gardens,  areca 
palms  and  pepper  plots. 

On  the  17th  we  moved  up  channel  and  anchored  off*  the 
northernmost  little  hillock  on  Koh  Pra  Tung,  passing  on 
the  way  the  small  exit  which  seemed  quite  clear  and  without 
breakers  though  there  were  rollers  across  the  mouth.  There 
is  a  large  space  in  the  interior  covered  with  Melaleuca  trees. 
On  the  mainland  opposite  much  the  same  feature  occurred 
— a  large  plain  about  10  ft.  above  high-water  level  of  dry 
white  sand  over  which  grew  grass  and  scattered  shrubs,  very 
thick  at  their  bases  which  were  clothed  with  much  moss  and 
immense  numbers  of  orchids.  This  sand  was  pure  white 
and  crunched  exactly  like  frozen  snow  when  walked  on  :  it 
looked  like  snow  too.  Here  occurred  Bromheadia  palustris 
while  several  of  the  bushes  bore  pretty  pale  green  or  white 
flowers  {Holarpena  pauciflora,  Eugenia  zeijlanica,  etc.). 
Elephants  were  said  to  be  common  inland  near  the  moun- 
tains. 

On  the  18th  we  reached  Koh  Jam  Yai  (Big  Jam  Island) 
at  1  p.m.  and  after  passing  along  a  rocky  shore  in  depths  of 
3  fathoms  anchored  in  a  shallow  bay  on  the  south-east  side, 
south  of  the  summit  (700  ft.),  where  there  is  a  neck  of  low 
land  behind  a  considerable  reef.  Along  the  north-eastern 
part  of  the  island  runs  an  almost  continuous  beach  and  the 
land  is  low,  dipping  from  the  central  hill  which  shows  faces 
of  rock.  Koh  Jam  Yai  (Lat.  9°  30'  N.)  is  about  3  miles  long 
and  one  wide  and  about  5  miles  from  the  mainland. 

On  the  19th  I  rowed  across  depths  of  3 — 5  fathoms  ;to 
the  west  side  of  Koh  Jam  Noi  (Little  Jam  Id.)  :  here  are 
no  beaches  but  patches  of  sand  above  rocks  :  the  sides  were 
steep  with  much  large  bamboo  above  them.  The  Sugar 
Loaves  to  the  north  are  pretty  little  hilly  islets  with  sand 
spits  and  Casuarinas  :  we  found  depths  of  4 — 7  fathoms 
between  them.  On  Feb.  19th  we  reached  Delisle  Island, 
about  5  miles  long  by  2  wide.  There  are  two  attractive 
bays  on  the  west  side,  in  the  southern  a  few  houses,  but 
the  coast  is  a  foul  one  with  many  rocks  off'-shore  :  a  hill 
forming  the  western  point  of  the  island  separates  the  bays. 
Rounding  the  north  point  we  found  sand  beaches  running 
for  a  mile  or  so  towards  the  eastern  point  and  anchored 
in  3  fathoms  otf  the  first  (Lat.  9°  45'  N.) .  A  broad  flat  reef 
and  sandbank  bare  at  low  springs  made  landing  difiicult 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  73 

but  fiu'ther  down,  beyond  outcrops  of  rock,  the  southern 
beach  seemed  cleaner  and  steeper.  The  land  m  our  neigh- 
bourhood was  partly  swampy  with  many  rattans  and  palms, 
partly  dry  and  sandy.  The  forest  was  not  lofty.  We  found 
no  water  but  it  was  to  be  obtained  on  a  point,  or  island,  to 
the  east.  The  eastern  shore  of  Delisle  Id.  is  low  but  a  hill 
rises  near  the  south.  On  the  mainland  opposite  were  high 
hills  many  of  them  looking  rather  bare  and  these  with  the 
smooth  green  sea  and  the  neighbouring  islets  made  a  pretty 
scene. 

We  left  at  11  a.m.  on  the  20th  Feb.  and  steering  round 
the  west  side  of  Saddle  island,  where  there  are  attractive 
Casuarina-bordered  beaches  contrasting  with  the  mangrove- 
fringed  northern  shore;  passed  south  of  the  Lighthouse  and 
east  of  everything  else  up  to  Koh  Phi  (the  lighthouse  island) 
outside  Renong  River  where  we  anchored.  On  the  south 
side  of  the  mouth  is  a  village  at  the  foot  of  a  small  hill  and 
a  little  farther  on  the  opposite  bank  is  the  Customs  station 
with  a  well  built  sea-wall  and  jetty  beneath  another  little 
hill.  At  low  tide  the  sand  and  mud  banks  at  the  river- 
mouth  almost  close  the  entrance.  Inland  up-stream  are 
mangroves  and  beyond  them  a  frontal  range  largely  treeless 
and  brown  but  assuming  beautiful  tones  in  the  afternoon 
light  :  behind  all  are  the  peaks  of  the  main  range  covered 
with  forests. 

On  the  23rd  we  paid  a  visit  to  Renong  town,  going  up- 
stream at  low  tide.  Except  that  it  passed  two  or  three  little 
hillocks  the  river  winds  among  mangroves  and  much  mud 
and  sand  were  exposed.  After  a  couple  of  miles  we  passed 
a  landing  place  and  row  of  buildings  on  our  right  where 
a  number  of  boats  and  lighters  lay  high  and  dry  :  soon  after 
we  repeatedly  found  shallow  water  and  had  to  wait  for  the 
rising  tide  and  after  about  two  miles  more  the  stream, 
branching,  became  too  shallow  for  our  boat  so  we  returned 
to  the  landing  place,  meeting  on  the  way  down  canoes  going 
up  laden  with  firewood.  On  shore  we  got  a  2-pony  victoria 
and  travelling  along  a  fair  road,  south  of  which  is  a  wide 
plain  being  worked  for  tin  with  dredgers,  passed  numerous 
Siamese  and  Chinese  shops  and  stalls  and  in  about  two  miles 
reached  the  beginning  of  the  town  proper.  Here  were 
better-class  shops,  some  of  brick  and  stucco,  cinemas,  post 
and  telegraph  office  and  a  good  neat  gendarmerie  barracks. 
We  first  called  at  a  substantial  brick  courthouse  on  an  espla- 
nade with  a  pavilion  and  football  ground  and  then  v/ent  up 
a  low  hill  to  the  governor's  office,  a  good  and  large  brick 
building  where  we  saw  an  English-speaking  official — the 
governor  being  absent.  Langsuan  on  the  east  coast,  we 
learnt,  could  be  reached  from  here  in  three  days  on  foot 
along  a  track  of  sorts.  Renong  town  lies  long  and  straggling 
between  the  government  quarter  and  the  landing  stage  and 
is  of  the  usual  nondescript  peninsular  type,  largely  Chinese, 
with  no  particular  features  ;  the  most  notable  being  the 
house  of  the  old  Rajah  who  governed  here  before  the  Civil 
Service  System  was  introduced  :  it  stood  in  a  large  tree- 


74  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

planted  space  surrounded  by  walls  twenty  or  more  feet  high 
with  a  large  summer-house  over  the  gate  :  the  roads  were 
pretty  good  and  there  were  some  fair  residences  :  in  the 
Chinese  stores  plenty  of  tinned  provisions  were  to  be  had 
but  there  was  little  fruit.  The  place  was  dry  and  dusty, 
larger  than  Pangnga  but  not  nearly  so  picturesque. 

A  few  Europeans  of  the  tin  dredging  company  live  and 
have  their  repairing  shops  here  and  a  good  deal  of  Malay 
is  understood. 

On  the  23rd  we  crossed  the  Pakchan  estuary  to  Victoria 
Point  in  Burma  and  anchored  off  the  jetty  (Lat.  10°  N.). 
The  settlement  seems  to  have  grown  a  little  since  I  was 
there  twenty  years  ago.  Though  with  its  paths,  tree-dotted 
grassy  slopes  and  red-roofed  houses  it  looks  attractive  from 
a  distance  it  does  not  improve  with  acquaintance — the 
bazaar  is  small  and  squalid  with  little  stock,  the  paths  are 
of  clay  and  very  rough  and  in  the  rainy  season  must  be  very 
muddy,  and  the  grass  is  lallang.  But  from  the  Wireless 
Station  on  the  ridge  the  view  over  sea,  islands  and  main- 
land to  the  mountains  is  wonderful.  A  road  to  Maliwun  is 
metalled  for  the  first  eight  miles,  beyond  it  has  been  aban- 
doned and  the  bridges  are  down;  but  it  can  still  be  traversed 
by  motor-cycle  in  the  dry  season.  The  place  was  in  charge 
of  a  sub-divisional  officer  and  a  European  Inspector  of 
Police  :  there  were  besides  a  Eurasian  preventive  officer,  an 
Asiatic  doctor  in  charge  of  a  small  hospital,  and  the  staff 
of  the  wireless  installation.  No  supplies  were  to  be  had 
but  water  from  wells  was  good.  The  surroundings  are 
beautiful :  but  as  a  settlement  Victoria  Point  does  not  com- 
pare well  even  with  such  a  Malayan  Sleepy  Hollow  as  Lumut 
in  the  Bindings. 

On  the  24th  we  took  in  firewood  and  a  pilot  at  Renong 
river  and  left  at  11  a.m.  The  Pakchan  is  a  fine  broad  estuary 
in  the  lower  part,  though  interrupted  by  several  islands  and 
almost  entirely  fringed  with  mangroves  :  inland  the  hills 
rise  to  some  height  in  places  (1,000 — 2,000  ft.)  but  they  are 
set  far  back  from  the  shore  and  are  not  impressive:  Waring- 
ton  Smyth's  reference  to  its  appearance  as  resembling  a 
northern  fiord  and  having  an  air  of  magnitude  does  not  seem 
justified.'^ 

There  are  hardly  any  signs  of  population  in  the  lower 
part  except  a  few  scattered  houses  and  hamlets  and  a  fish- 
trap  here  and  there  :  also  there  are  practically  no  clearings. 

We  had  no  difficulty  in  proceeding  as  far  as  Well  Hill 
(23  miles)  but  there  we  got  onto  our  first  shoal  and  after- 
wards we  had  to  sound  a  good  deal — for  the  pilot  proved  use- 
less— to  find  sufficient  water  for  the  launch  which  draws 
6-7  ft.  Above  Well  Hill  there  are  more  signs  of  hal  itation 
on  both  Burmese  and  Siamese  banks  :  mangroves  give 
place  to  Nipa  palms  while  a  belt  of  flat  coinitry  begins  to 
border  the  estuary  which  now  becomes  more  river-like. 
We  anchored  at  the  landing  place  of  Namchut  or  Kraburi, 

7    Op  cit.  II,  p.  31. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  75 

the  principal  village  of  the  old  state  of  Kra,  now  merged  in 
Renong  :  a  couple  of  miles  ahead  on  the  Burmese  side  we 
could  see  the  police  station  and  dak  bungalow  of  Marang 
on  a  low  bare  hill. 

From  the  landing  stage  backed  by  a  few  shops  a  well- 
kept  bridle  path  ran  through  rice-fields,  which  commenced 
right  behind  the  Nipas,  to  the  Muang  or  town  of  Namchut. 
Less  than  a  mile  inland  are  the  office  and  house  of  the 
Ampurr*^  a  neat  police  station  and  some  shops  and  houses 
whence  the  track  and  telegraph  wire  continue  northwards 
to  Chumpom  and  southwards  to  Renong.  Beyond  the 
village  is  a  wat  with  several  wooden  bungalows  and  a  large 
iron-roofed  sala,  or  resting-place,  and  on  a  slight  hill  above 
it  a  temple  with  thirteen  images  of  Buddlia.  There  is  a 
pretty  view  from  the  temple  showing  the  dried-up  rice 
fields,  clumps  of  fruit  trees,  bamboo,  secondary  growth 
and  distant  hills  and  forest  :  and  the  regular  and  dense  belts 
of  Nipa  palms  along  the  river  look  like  raised  embank- 
ments. We  woke  next  morning  to  find  everything  drenched 
with  moisture  and  shrouded  in  a  dense  mist  which  did  not 
disperse  until  8  o'clock. 

On  the  25th  we  left  the  launch  at  1.30  p.m.  oJ^i  a  rising 
tide  and  rowed  up  stream  sounding  as  we  went.  Screens  of 
Nipa  hid  the  country  inland  :  at  about  2^2  miles  we  jDassed 
Marang  dak  bungalow  on  its  bare  hill  and  about  2  miles 
farther  up  came  to  the  first  clear  view  on  the  west  side — 
steep  banks  of  earth  with  the  ground  running  back  sharply 
and  level,  covered  with  rice  or  grass.  Above  Marang  houses 
become  more  numerous  but  many  of  them  are  hidden  by 
the  Nipas.  At  about  live  miles  we  came  to  Mamoh  on  the 
Siamese  bank  and  from  thereon  the  view  became  more  open 
over  rice  fields  with  houses,  low  characteristic  barns,  clumps 
of  trees,  palms,  bamboos  and  partially  forested  low  hills. 
At  about  7%  miles  we  reached  a  substantial  landing  stage 
and  found  a  bungalow  a  hundred  yards  inshore  and  also 
the  termination  of  a  good  broad  earth  road  coming  in  from 
the  N.E.  This  place  was  Tapli :  a  village  lay  half  a  mile 
farther  up  stream  and  after  interviewing  the  Phu-yai-ban 
(headman)  we  set  off  on  our  return  journey,  arriving  at  the 
launch  at  8  p.m. 

On  Feb.  26th  we  took  the  launch  up  river  at  low  tide 
touching  once  on  a  rock  in  mid-stream:  anchored  at  Mamoh 
after  haJf  an  hour's  journey.  From  here  a  track  runs  to 
Tapli  in  about  40  minutes  through  small  forest,  scrub, 
fenced-in  houses  and  gai'dens.  On  both  sides  of  the  river  this 
district  is  fairly  populated  and  must  produce  a  good  deal  of 
rice  :  it  owns  elephants  and  many  buffaloes. 

A  track  southwards  runs  through  ricefields  and  land 
enclosed  by  bamboo  fences,  barbed  wire  and  euphorbia 
hedges.  There  is  a  modest  wat  on  a  small  hill.  The  coun- 
try, all  under  rice  where  irrigable,  was  now  covered  with 
brown  and  tawny  stubble  pleasantly  contrasting  with  the 

a    District  Officer. 


76  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

palms,  fruit  trees,  bamboos  and  patches  of  scrub  and  jungle 
dotted  about :  in  the  distance  were  hills  partly  forest,  partly 
scrub-covered.  Numerous  and  large  herds  of  buffaloes 
made  rambling  about  nervous  work  for  a  solitary  white 
man.  Mamoh  contains  several  Chinese  shops.  Between 
3  and  8  a.m.  in  the  morning  a  dense  shroud  of  mist  always 
lay  over  the  country. 

On  Mai'ch  1st  we  sent  our  men  and  baggage  up  to  Tapli 
in  a  small  cargo  boat.  The  Lord  Lieutenant  of  the  Monthon 
(Puket)  was  expected  and  Mamoh  had  been  making  a  land- 
ing-place for  his  use  :  unfortunately  it  did  not  extend  out 
to  low  tide  level  but  ended  in  mud  two  feet  deep.  The  Lord- 
Lieutenant  did  not  go  ashore  at  Mamoh. 

The  journey  from  Mamoh  to  Tapli  takes  longer  by 
water  than  by  land,  but  at  high  tide  it  is  a  pretty  one  as  the 
ricefields  come  right  to  the  edges  of  the  banks  in  places. 
Tapli  is  the  name  of  the  landing  place  :  the  village  beyond  is 
called  Ban  Wang  Tapoh'-'.  A  fair-sized  bridge  was  being 
built  over  the  stream  along  which  it  lies.     (Klong  Wang). 

The  view  from  Tapli  was  very  fine — westward  across 
the  river  lay  ricefields  with  a  few  scattered  houses  and  fruit 
trees  with  low  hills  beyond  :  northwards  the  river  winds 
among  flat  ricefields  coming  from  low  hills  many  miles 
away  with  beyond  them  a  mountain  range  of  about  2,000  ft. 
running  S.E.  &  N.W.  Clumps  of  trees  palms  and  bamboos 
diversified  the  rice  lands  and  in  the  evening  with  the  low 
light  shining  on  the  river  and  the  hills  a  glorious  deep  grey- 
blue  or  purple  the  vista  was  exquisite. 

The  hills  beyond  the  bungalow  were  covered  with  trees 
and  much  bamboo  and  the  undergrowth  was  very  light. 
Every  morning  the  heavy  white  mist  lay  over  the  river 
valley  :  the  daily  rise  and  fall  of  the  stream  was  still  con- 
siderable (8-10  ft.). 

Having  at  length  hired  eleven  elephants  for  our  equip- 
ment (the  local  animals  carry  a  ridiculously  small  load) 
I  left  TapU  on  foot  at  10.20  a.m.  on  March  10th  affer  seeing 
the  first  lot  of  our  baggage  well  away.  For  the  first  five 
kilometres  to  Eakchan  village  the  trans-peninsular  road-to- 
be  ran  north  through  scrub  and  ricefields  fallow  under  grass. 
At  the  village  which  is  the  last  for  many  miles  was  a  police 
station  and  a  long  bridge  over  a  broad  stream  between  high 
banks — the  Klong  In  Song  which  the  road  follows,  a  tribu- 
tary of  the  Pakchan  rising  in  the  Central  range  not  far  from 
the  sources  of  the  Klong  Tasan,  on  the  eastern  side  of  the 
divide,  which  runs  to  the  Gulf  of  Siam  south  of  Chumpom. 

Thence  the  road  with  the  telegraph  line  passes  through 
uninteresting  scrub,  first  eastwards,  then  south  and  again 
east  until  it  reaches  the  main  range  which  is  covered  with 
evergreen  forest.  The  boundary  between  Renong  and 
Chumporn  is  18  kilometres  from  Wang  Tapoh  :  the  pass 
by  which  the  road  proceeds  is  low — only  about  two  hundred 

9    Ban  or  Bang  =  House  or  Village. 


1920J  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  77 

and  fifty  ft. — and  Tasan  our  next  stopping  place,  lies  at  the 
eastern  foot  of  the  lulls  2^/4  kilometres  farther  on. 

Tasan  is  not  a  village  but  only  the  station  of  the  engineer 
of  the  Railway  Department  who  is  in  charge  of  road  con- 
struction. The  latter  is  at  present  of  earth  only  and  is 
impassible  in  the  wet  season  :  the  bridges  are  all  of  rough 
wood  and  there  is  a  considerable  amount  of  cutting  and 
embankment  :  after  the  first  two  hours  from  Tapli  there  is 
a  good  deal  of  water  (the  Klong  In  Song)  along  or  across  the 
track. 

Tasan  lies  in  a  basin  into  which  the  elephant  track, 
following  quite  a  different  route  from  the  road,  enters  from 
the  south-west.  The  house  of  the  Engineer,  Signor  Giacone; 
his  office,  clerks  quarters,  coolie  lines  and  a  vegetable 
garden  on  the  flat,  make  up  the  settlement.  The  elephants 
took  about  6  hours  on  the  journey,  I  and  my  boy  3%  hours. 
We  temporarily  unloaded  into  an  old  shed  and  I  spent  the 
night  with  the  very  hospitable  engineer.  Next  day  I  set  up 
the  tents  and  made  camp  beneath  some  trees  near  the  station 
between  the  Klong  Tasan  and  a  little  tributary  of  good 
water  and  we  moved  the  luggage  into  it.  Deer  flies  were 
troublesome  and  in  the  evening  a  huge  species  of  mosquito 
was  active.  Seven  elephants  were  sent  back  for  the  remain- 
ing baggage  for  which  shelters  were  ready  and  which  arrived 
next  day  with  Robinson. 

The  engineer  and  his  household  were  all  ill  with  fever 
from  which  he  had  already  lost  tlu'ee  servants.  Tigers  also 
were  bad  and  had  recently  taken  from  a  stable  within  30 
yards  of  the  house  a  pony  and  a  cow.  As  a  collecting 
locality,  however,  the  place  looked  promising  though  the 
walk  from  Tapli  was  very  uninteresting  while  the  hard  open 
road  and  hot  sun  had  been  rather  trying. 

At  Tasan  we  had  excellent  di*y  weather  but  hot  to  us — 
the  shade  temperature  one  afternoon  being  95°,  though 
generally  it  was  about  92°  :  at  daybreak  it  was  about  68  °  ; 
but  once  when  it  fell  to  65°  the  night  seemed  very  cold. 
In  the  neighbourhood  the  country  is  undulating  and 
nowhere  steep  :  walking  in  the  valleys  is  easy.  There  was 
a  great  deal  of  bamboo  in  the  forest  which,  fairly  dense  on 
the  flat,  was  sufficiently  open  to  allow  moving  about  with 
ease  on  the  hill  tops  ;  much  of  this  bamboo  was  fruiting. 

There  was  no  great  abundance  of  plants  in  flower  nor 
were  there  many  orchids  :  blossom  was  commonest  on 
bushes  and  climbers  and  on  a  few  inconspicuous  little  plants. 
Clear-water  streams  were  numerous  across  the  tracks  and 
in  damp  spots  leeches  were  troublesome  while  bush-ticks 
abounded  eveiywhere.  The  camp  was  a  pleasant  one  owing 
to  its  dryness  and  the  absence  of  mosquitoes  ;  but  several 
of  our  men  had  short  attacks  of  fever.  Elephants  frequent- 
ly passed  through  Tasan  and  a  few  Siamese  went  to  and  fro, 
but  there  was  no  cart  traffic. 

Twelve  elephants  having  arrived  from  Chumporn,  on 
the  28th  March  we  saw  a  start  made  with  loading-up  and 


78  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

ourselves  set  off  at  7.30  a.m.  The  road  led  through  forest 
(Tamaila  9  kms.)  and  crossed  a  number  of  streams  and  dry 
gullies  :  at  20  kms.  it  passed  near  the  end  of  a  long  lime- 
stone hill — the  first  met  with,  though  later  other  isolated 
ones  cropped  up  in  the  plains.  Beyond  this  one  got  out  of 
the  hills,  and  bamboo  and  other  scrubs  became  more  fre- 
quent on  the  flat.  At  11.07  a.m.  came  Sep  Yuan  (24  kms.) 
where  stood  a  road-overseer's  house  on  the  north  bank  of 
the  Klong  (River)  Tasan  wliich  flows  into  Chumporn  Bay 
though  the  town  itself  is  on  another  river,  the  Klong  Kapao, 
which  has  a  common  estuary  with  the  Tasan. 

Beyond  Sep  Yuan  the  road  is  older,  broader  and  very 
largely  overgrown  with  short  grass — very  dry  and  sUppery. 
Houses,  fruit  trees,- grass  land  and  rice  fields  border  it  now 
all  the  way  to  Chumporn  :  the  "  ton-ta  "  palm  (Borassus) 
was  numerous  in  the  paddy  lands  ;  coco  and  areca  palms 
and  bamboo  lined  the  road.  The  houses  were  of  negative 
character  without  distinctive  features.  Soon  after  midday 
I  had  had  enough  :  it  was  now  very  hot  in  the  sunlit  road 
(95°  in  the  shade)  though  the  earlier  hours  had  happily  been 
cloudy  :  the  railway  bridge  over  the  Klong  Kapao  was  a 
welcome  sight  and  ten  minutes  later  I  reached  the  Chumporn 
Resthouse  (35  kms.  =  22  miles)  at  1.50  p.m.  Robinson 
arrived  at  4  p.m.  The  walk  along  the  hard  hot  road  gave 
both  of  us  very  sore  feet. 

Of  Chumporn  town  not  much  need  be  said  :  it  is  one 
of  the  places  where  railway  travellers  to  and  from  Bangkok 
have  to  spend  a  night  (Lat.  10°  30'  N.). 

It  consists  in  the  main  of  one  long  street  of  shops  con- 
taining tin  and  iron  ware,  cotton  goods,  lamps,  food  ;  a  gaol 
with  a  galvanised  iron  stockade,  a  new  government  office — a 
long  wooden  building  on  piles  facing  the  less  ambitious  old 
one,  post  and  telegraph  office  and  official's  houses.  A 
holiday  of  19  days,  general  at  this  period  of  the  hot  dry 
season,  was  taking  its  course. 

On  the  30th,  thanks  to  the  kindness  of  the  Governor, 
we  made  a  trip  down  river  in  a  motorboat  starting  from  the 
boat-house  of  the  royal  rest-house.  The  river  is  pretty,  its 
clear  deep  green  water  running  between  high  steep  banks 
backed  by  bamboos,  palms  and  fruit  trees  with  houses  at 
intervals.  Nearer  the  sea  the  shores  fall  away  and  Nipa 
palms  and  mangroves  take  the  place  of  other  trees. 

In  an  hour  and  a  half  we  reached  a  large  fishing  village 
at  the  mouth  ;  a  slack  period  was  on  and  preparations  were 
being  made  for  the  fishing  season  :  boats  were  being  re- 
paired, screens  made,  nets  mended.  In  the  busy  se^:Son  the 
.population  is  probably  a  couple  of  thousand — mostly 
Chinese.  The  boats,  viking-like  craft,  have  a  high  straight 
stem,  two  rudders,  raking  stern  and  one  very  raking  mast. 

There  is  a  bazaar,  a  good  customs  house,  small  police- 
station  and  a  lighthouse  on  an  island.  The  shores  of  the 
estuary  are  generally  low. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  79 

On  the  31st  March,  all  our  baggage  having  arrived,  we 
went  by  train  northwards  to  Koh  Lak,  or  Prachuap  Kirikan, 
in  S.W.  Siam  and  in  that  state  we  collected  for  three  weeks 
but  the  country  was  so  dry  and  flowerless  that  no  botanical 
material  was  obtained. 

I  had  the  assistance  of  a  native  collector  at  Mamoh, 
Tapli  and  Tasan  and  his  statements  as  to  the  size  and  nature 
of  the  plant  from  which  he  obtained  his  specimens  may 
occasionally  be  unreliable  :  colours,  however,  being  noted 
from  the  fresh  specimens  are  correct. 

This  account  is  very  superficial :  it  is  written  merely 
to  give  an  idea  of  the  localities  visited  and  worked  and  does 
not  attempt  to  deal  with  the  flora  or  fauna  of  those  places. 
The  latter  will  be  recorded  in  other  papers  :  in  this  380 
plants  are  dealt  with,  of  which  59  species  or  varieties  are 
described  as  new. 

Apparently  what  Mr.  Ridley  means  in  this  report  by 
"  Malay  Peninsula  "  is  not  the  whole  of  the  Malay  Penin- 
sula, which  extends  northwards  as  far  as  the  head  of  the 
Gulf  of  Siam  (Lat.  13°  30'  N.)  ;  but  only  the  southern 
portion  below  Lat.  7°  N.,  i.e.,  practically  the  Malay  States  : 
but  exclusive  of  the  Malay  district  of  Perils  and  inclusive 
of  the  Siamese  State  of  "  Patani." 

The  northern  limit  of  the  true  Malaysian  flora,  which 
covers  the  southern  half  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra, 
Borneo  and — to  a  less  extent — Java,  and  of  which  the  con- 
tinental section  may  be  called  Malayan,  seems  to  be  a  line 
joining  the  towns  of  Alor  Star  (in  Kedah)  and  Singgora 
(at  the  entrance  to  the  Inland  Sea) . 

Botanical  features  confirm  what  geological  investiga- 
tions indicate — that  this  boundary  was  the  coast  line  of  what 
was  once  an  island  but  what  has  since  become  the  southern 
half  of  the  Malay  Peninsula. ^'^ 

I  would  call  this  Alor  Star — Singgora  hue  a  major 
transverse  break  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  and  am  inchned 
to  think  that  there  is  another  between  Bandon  and  Pangnga, 
and  perhaps  Bandon  and  Trang. 

The  pass  across  the  Isthmus  of  Kra,  between  Pakchan 
and  Chumporn,  to  which  so  much  attention  has  been  given, 
is  a  mere  dip  in  the  mountain  range  there  and  seems  to  be 
structurally  and  biologically  of  very  little  importance. 

Mr.  Ridley  elsewhere  calls  the  flora  of  Peninsular  Siam 
the  "  Tenasserim  Flora  "  and  the  choice  of  the  name  seems 
a  reasonable  one  ;  for  though  the  area  in  which  it  occurs  is 
politically  Siam  yet  the  plants  of  a  great  part  of  that  State 
are  much  the  same  as  those  of  Tenasserim  and  the  flora  of 
the  latter  region  was  by  a  long  period  the  first  to  be  investi- 
gated and  known. 

10  Scrivenor,  Journ.  Straits  Branch  Roy.  Asiat.  Soc.  No.  59,  July  igii, 
"The  Geological  Structure  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,"  pp.  1-13  (vide  pp. 
2,8,9.). 

Kidley,  torn,  cit.,  "The  Flora  of  Lower  Siam,"  pp.  15-26  (vide  pp. 
15,  16,);  id.ib.,  "  A  Botanical  Expedrtion  to  Lower  Siam,  "  pp  37-60  (vide  pp. 
27,  29,  30,  55,  56,  59,  60). 


80  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Mnseuma.  [Vol.  X, 

Between  the  Malayan  and  Tenasserimese  floras  there 
must  be  a  transition  zone,  or  area  where  the  two  floras 
overlap  and  intermingle,  though  the  zone  is  probably  not 
so  broad  as  the  zoological  one  between  Indo-Chinese  and 
Malaysian  animals  since  the  latter  are  more  adventurous 
than  plants. 

When  travelling  between  Penang  and  Bangkok  by  rail- 
way I  have  been  struck  more  than  once  by  the  apparant 
(for  I  am  no  botanist)  marked  difference  in  the  vegetation 
north  and  south  of  the  Bandon  River  ;  and  it  may  be  that  as 
the  Malayan  flora  extends  practically  without  adulteration 
north  to  about  Singgora  so  does  the  pure  Tenasserimese 
flora  stretch  southwards  to  Junk  Seylon  :  and  that 
the  area  between  the  Bandon  and  Singgora  breaks 
constitutes  a  true  intermediate  region  which  has 
derived  its  vegetation  from  both  north  and  south  ;  though 
probably  for  climatic  reasons,  and  possibly  because  of  a 
less  effective  break  near  Bandon,  northern  plants  are  more 
numerous  in  it. 

Perhaps  we  have,  therefore,  three  floras  : — a  Tenas- 
serimese, a  Malayo-Tenasserimese  and  a  Malayan  one  :  but 
they  all  occur  in  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

Not  only  is  there  a  north  and*  south  difference  but  there 
is  also  one  of  east  and  west  :  this  may  be  superficial  and 
unimportant  and  due  to  the  presence  or  absence  of  certain 
forms  of  vegetation  rather  than  to  different  floras  ;  but 
anyone  who  has  travelled  or  sailed  along  both  shores  of  the 
northern  part  of  the  Peninsula  from  Mergui  to  Penang  and 
from  Bangkok  to  Singgora  cannot  fail  to  be  struck  by  the 
contrast  between  the  more  forested  west  and  the  more 
grassy  and  scrub-covered  east. 

Though  perhaps  arising  from  nature  of  the  land  surface 
these  differences  should  be  kept  in  mind  while  analysing 
the  flora  as  long  as  collections  are  few  and  sporadic. 

DILLENIACEAE. 

1.  Delima  sarmentosa,  L. 

Koh  Jam  Yai :  Tree  ;  flowers  white  ;  6628.  Distrib. 
India,  Malaya.    This  plant  is  a  scandent  shrub. 

2.  DiUenia  aurea,  Sm. 

Tapli  :  Petals  bright  lemon-yellow,  centre  apricot- 
yellow  ;  tree  ;  6731.     Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

ANONACEAE. 

3.  Desmos  chinensis,  Lour. 

Tapli :  Fruit  green,  tipped  paler  ;  small  tree,  8  ft. ; 
6794.     Distrib.  Cochin-China,  Malay  Peninsula. 

4.  Melodorum  rubiginosum.  Hook.  fil. 

Tapli :  Mixed  with  Desmos  discolor  ;  6794. 

5.  Orophea  cuneiformis,  King 

Tasan  :  Green,  base  of  petals  pink  ;  7002.  Distrib. 
Malay  Peninsula. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  81 

6.  Miliusa  filipes,  sp.  nov. 

Branchlets  pubescent.  Leaves  thin,  elliptic,  bluntly 
cuspidate,  base  narrowed,  blunt,  slightly  unequal ;  nerves 
about  10  pairs  inarching  '2  in.  from  the  edge,  elevate  be- 
neath with  few  transverse  and  reticulate  nervules,  glabrous 
or  sparsely  hairy  with  rather  long  hairs  on  petiole  and  mid- 
rib, 5  •  25  in.  long,  1  •  5  in.  wide,  petiole  very  short.  Flowers 
solitary,  axillary,  on  filiform  peduncles  -75  in.  long.  Petals 
ovate,  blunt,  -4  in.  long,  -2  in.  wide,  finely  dotted. 

Tasan  ;  Greenish-yellow,  red  at  base  ;  6968.  Allied  to 
M.  longipes.  King,  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  but  not  glabrous, 
with  very  short  petioles  and  larger  flower. 

7.  Goniothalamus  undulatus,  sp.  nov. 

Pubescent  shrub  5  ft.  tall.  Leaves  thin,  oblong,  shortly 
blunt,  cuspidate,  base  cuneate,  edge  undulate,  glabrous  ex- 
cept the  pubescent  midrib  beneath  ;  nerves  slender,  11  pairs, 
inarching  far  from  midi'ib,  7  in.  long,  2-75  in.  wide  ;  petiole 
•4  in.  long,  pubescent.  Flowers  (all  detached)  apparently 
solitary,  pedicel  •  1  in.  long.  Sepals  ovate  broad,  ribbed,  •  25 
in.  long,  red,  hairy  ;  outer  petals  thick,  coriaceous,  ovate^ 
lanceolate  -75  to  1  in.  long,  red  hairy  ;  inner  petals  half  as 
long,  broad,  triangular  hairy. 

Tasan  :  Pale  green  ;  5  ft.  ;  6836.  Undoubtedly  near 
G.  tamirensis,  Pierre  of  Cochin-China,  but  much  less  hairy 
all  over  and  flowers  much  larger.   . 

SCHIZANDRACEAE 

8.  Kadsura  Roxburghiana,  Arn. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  green  to  scarlet  ;  7051.     Distrib.  India. 

CAPPARIDACEAE. 

9.  Capparis  Klossii,  sp.  nov. 

Climber.  Branches  puberulous,  armed  with  short, 
recurved  thorns  in  pairs.  Leaves  large,  thin,  coriaceous, 
glabrous  above  ;  midrib  and  nerves  7  pairs  elevate  beneath, 
pubescent  •,  nerves  inaiching  within  the  margin,  transverse, 
nervules  few,  9  ins.  long,  5  in.  wide  ;  petiole  thick  -5  in. 
long  with  2  thorns  at  base.  Raceme  terminal,  8  in.  long. 
Flowers  numerous,  pedicel  1  in.  long  or  less.  Bracts 
lanceolate;  spathulate,  petioled  -5  in.  long,  -08  in.  wide, 
petiole  as  long  as  blade  between  a  pair  of  deflexed  hooks. 
Sepals  rounded  coriaceous,  -4  in.  long.  Petals  oblong, 
ovate,  clawed,  '5  in.  long,  white.  Stamens  very  numerous 
1-25  in.  long.  Gynophore  slender,  2  in.  long,  ovary  ovoid 
with  a  short  stigmatic  point,  -1  in.  long.  Tasan  :  petals 
white  ;  climber  ;  6845. 

This  striking  Capparis  has  the  largest  leaves  of  any 
I  know  from  Asia.  It  is  most  closely  allied  to  C.  trinervia, 
also  from  this  region,  but  the  flowers  are  not  ferruginous 
and  the  leaves  larger  and  not  clearly  3-nerved  as  in  that 
species.  j 


82  Journal  of  the  F.MS.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

10.  Capparis  micracantha,  DC. 

Tapli  :  White,  2  petals  partly  yellow  or  reddish-brown  ; 
6763  :  White,  bases  of  petals  yellowish  brown  ;  2  ft.  high  ; 
6737.  Pulau  Mohea  :  White,  lip  crimson  ;  straggling 
shrub  ;  6527.     Distrib.  Siam,  South  to  Kedah 

11.  Cralaeva  macrocarpa,  Kurz. 

Tasan :  Stamens  purple,  petals  pale  yellow-white ;  6932 : 
White,  stems  of  petals  green  ;  stamens  dull  crimson  ;  tree. 
Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 

VIOLACEAE. 

12.  Alsodeia  Kunstleriana,  var.  latifolia,  var.  nou. 

Leaves  broad,  elliptic,  7  in.  long,  3  in.  wide,  Tasan  ; 
Greenish  yellow  ;  3  ft.  ;  7028.  I  take  this  to  be  a  form  of 
A.  Kunsteriana,  King,  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  but  the  type 
form  of  this  has  quite  narrow  lanceolate  leaves. 

13.  Alsodeia  mollis,  Hook.  fil. 

Nam  Chut  :  Flowers  white,  stamens  yellow  :  6696. 
Tapli ;  white  ;  6788.     Distrib.  Tenasserim. 

14.  Alsodeia  racemosa.  Hook.  fil. 

Tapli :  White  ;  tree  ;  6750.  This  is  based  upon  a 
specimen  labelled  **  species  violaceae,  Nov.  1835 "  from 
Griffith's  collections  in  Hooker's  herbarium  and  attributed 
to  Assam  where  Griffith  was  collecting  at  that  date,  but 
there  is  another  specimen  from  Mergui,  Griffith,  in  Wight's 
collection.  It  is  clear  that  there  is  a  mistake  in  the  first 
labelling.  The  plant  is  unlike  any  other  species  in  having 
racemes  of  flowers  and  producing  these  when  the  leaves 
are  fallen,  at  least  usually.  There  are  no  leaves  on  the  Tapli 
plant. 

POLYGALACEAE. 

15.  Xanthophyllum  Affine,  Korth. 

Taph  :  Fruit  green  ;  tree  ;  6729.  Distrib.  India, 
Malaya. 

16.  Xanthophyllum  Kin^i,  Chodat. 

Taph ;  Shrub ;  6776.  Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 
Both  these  specimens  in  fruit  only,  but  I  think  rightly 
identified. 

GUTTIFERAE. 

17.  Garcinia  sp. 

Tree.  Leaves  lanceolate  acuminate,  long,  narrowed  to 
base,  drying  grey,  rather  thinly  coriaceous,  midrib  pro- 
minent ;  nerves  slender,  6  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  petiole  •  3  in. 
long,  thick  angled.  Flowers  solitaay  below  leaves,  sub- 
sessile.  Sepals  ovate,  round,  -25  in.  long.  Petals  rather 
longer,  round.  Fruit  ovoid,  globose,  red,  -4  in.  tlirough. 
Stigma  of  about  20  pustules.  Tapli  :  Fruit  dull  crimson  ; 
tree ;  6875. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  83 

TERNSTROEMIACEAE. 

18.  Ternstroemia  penangiana  Wall. 

Tasan  :  White  :  tree  ;  6970.  Distrib.  Malay  Penin- 
sula. 

19.  Schima  Noronhae,  Reinw. 

Mainland  shores  of  Takuapa  :  Yellow  to  deep  orange  ; 
5  to  8  ft.  high  ;  6617.     Distrib.  India  and  Malaya. 

I  never  saw  it  with  yellow  flowers,  and  it  is  generally 
at  least  more  than  8  ft.  tall.* 

DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 

20.  Dipterocarpus  turbinatus,  Gaertn. 

Tasan  :  Base  white  to  sahnon,  tips  yellow  ;  large  tree  ; 
6858  :  Base  white,  tips  crimson  ;  tree  ;  6925.  Distrib. 
Burma  to  north  of  Malay  Peninsula.  Fallen  corollas  only 
sent.     (Malay  Name  "  Krueng.") 

21.  Vatica  faginea,  Dyer. 

Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  Tree  ;  buds  lilac-green, 
fruits  red  ;  6629.     Distrib.  Tenasserim,  Siam. 

22.  Pachynocarpus  Wallichii,  King. 

Tapli :  Yellow  ;  tree  ;  6748.  Distrib.  Malay  Penin- 
sula. 

This  is  a  big  leaved  and  big  flowered  form  ;  some  of 
the  leaves  measure  12  ins.  long  and  5  ins.  wide. 

ANCISTROCLADACEAE. 

23.  Ancistrocladus  Griffiihii,  Planch. 

Koh  Goh  :  Flowers  pale  green  ;  woody  climber. 
Distrib.  Mergui. 

MALVACEAE. 

24.  Hibiscus  tiliaceus,  L. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Flowers  red  to  reddish-yellow  ;  throat 
deep  crimson  ;  large  bush,  20  ft.  high  ;  6566.  Koh  Pipidon  ; 
6544. 

25.  Hibiscus  macrophyllus,  Roxb. 

Tapli :  Tree  ;  hard  fruit,  silky  golden  ;  6767.  Distrib. 
India  to  Malay  Peninsula. 

26.  Thespesla  populnea,  Carr. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  yellow  to  red  ;  tree  ;  6543  and 
6550.     Distrib.  Tropical  Asia  and  Africa. 

27.  Sida  rhombifolia,  L. 

TapU  :  Yellow  ;  2  ft.  high  ;  6811.     Distrib.  Tropics. 

28.  Urena  lobata,  L. 

Tasan  :  Deep  pink,  throat  crimson  ;  6878.  Distrib. 
Tropic*. 

•  Possibly  some  confusion  of  labels  had  occurred  when  the 
specimens  were  unpacked. — G.B.K. 


84  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

STERCULIACEAE. 

29.  Sterculia  laevis,  Wall. 

Tasan  :  Green  ;  6905.    Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula. 

30.  Sterculia  rubiginosa  var.  ensifolia.  Mast. 

Nam  Chut  :  Flowers  red  to  yellowish  ;  6692.  Renong 
River  mouth  ;  inflorescence  pink  ;  6649.  Distrih.  Malay 
Peninsula. 

31.  Helicteres  hirsuta.  Lour. 

Tasan  :  Carmine  pink  ;  4  f  t.  ;  6890  :  Pink  to  crimson, 
base  of  upper  petals  yellowish  ;  4  ft.  ;  6948.  Distrih.  Siam, 
North  of  Malay  Peninsula. 

TILIACEAE. 

32.  Elaeocarpus  tectonaefolius,  sp.  nov. 

Tree  :  Branches  velvety  ;  Leaves  broadly  ovate,  base 
cordate,  tip  rounded,  thin-textiu*ed  above,  except  the  velvety 
midrib  and  nerves  beneath,  nerves  10  pairs  and  prominent 
reticulations  hairy,  12  in.  long,  8  in.  wide  ;  petiole  tomentose, 
4' 5  in.  long,  deeply  grooved  above  with  short,  simple  or 
branched  processes  on  the  side  of  the  groove.  Stipules 
broadly  rounded,  oblong,  strongly  nerved,  •  5  in.  wide,  •  4  in. 
long,  top  rounded  truncate.  Racemes  axillary,  4  in.  long, 
tomentose.  Flowers  rather  distant,  pedicels,  -5  in.  long. 
Sepals  lanceolate-acuminate,  •  15  in.  long,  pubescent.  Petals 
little  longer,  oblong  obcuneate,  apex  fimbriate,  hairy. 
Stamens  ;  filaments  linear,  narrow  with  a  tuft  of  hairs  at  the 
top.  Ovary  pubescent,  ellipsoid,  cone-shaped,  3-celled, 
•  1  in.  ;  style  pubescent,  longer.  Disc  undulate  lobed,  pro- 
minent, velvety. 

TapU  :  Tree  ;  6761. 

This  remarkable  plant  is  only  related  to  Blume's 
Elaeocarpus  macrophyllus  of  Java,  resembUng  it  in  the 
large  thin  leaves  and  the  large  stipules.  It  is  quite  distinct 
in  the  velvety  covering,  cordate  leaves  and  anthers  crowned 
with  short  hairs. 

RUTACEAE. 

33.  Evodia  viticina,  Wall.  Cat.  1219. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  white,  stamens  yellow,  sepals 
and  bracts  pale  yellowish  green  ;  6558.  This  is  only  known 
from  the  Tenasserim  district.  The  foUage  in  these  speci- 
mens is  stiff er  and  more  polished  than  in  the  type. 

34.  Acronychia  Porteri,  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  :  Pale  green,  centre  yeUow  ;  tree  ;  7009.  Distrih. 
Malay  Peninsula. 

35.  Micromelum  pubescens,  Bl. 

Mamoh  :  Fruit  green ;  tree ;  6708.  Distrih.  Indo- 
Malaya. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  85 

36.  Clausena  excavata,  Burm. 

Tapli :  Small  tree  ;  flowers  greenish,  stamens  yellow  ; 
6818.     Distrih.  India,  Malaya. 

37.  Clausena  hirta,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  :  3  ft.  tall,  entirely  shortly  densely  hairy.  Leaves 
22  in.  long,  leaflets  9  or  10,  lowest  pair  round,  ovate,  crenu- 
late,  3  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  upper  ones  oblique,  elliptic,  blunt, 
cuspidate,  base  cuneate  inaequilateral  ;  nerves  7  or  8  pairs 
inarching  within  the  edge,  7  in.  long,  3  in.  wide.  All  thinly 
herbaceous,  glabrous  above  and  hairy  on  the  nerves  beneath, 
thickly  covered  with  translucent  glands  and  dotted  over 
with  larger  sparser  dark  brown  ones  ;  petiolules  •  05  in.  long, 
hairy.  Panicle  hairy  8  in.  long  with  branches  1  •  5  in.  long 
at  base  and  shorter  upwards  bearing  short,  few-flowered 
cymes,  8  or  fewer  on  each.  Flowers  very  shortly  pedicelled. 
Calyx  and  lobes  short,  5.  Petals  imbricate  in  a  globose 
mass,  •  1  in.  long,  oblong.  Stamens  8,  filaments  short,  thick, 
narrowed  at  base.  Anther  larger,  thick.  Ovary  5-lobed. 
Style  short  and  thick.  Fruit  suh-globose,  •  1  in.  long  when 
di-y,  closely  set  with  large  punctate  glands. 

Tasan  :  Petals  pale  green,  stamens  yellow  ;  3  ft.  ;  7035. 

Allied  to  C.  heptaphylla,  W.  &  A.,  but  densely  hairy. 

OCHNACEAE. 

38.  Ochna  grandis,  Ridl. 

Delisle  Island. off  Takuapa  :  Scandent  bush  25  ft.  high  ; 
yellow,  stamens  brown  ;  6640.     Distrih.  Perils. 

I  am  not  certain  whether  Pierre's  O.  Harmandi  is  not 
the  same  species  and  perhaps  both  are  to  be  referred  to 
O.  Wallichii,  Planchon. 

CHAILLETIACEAE. 

39.  Chailletia  longipetala,  Turcz. 

Taph  :  White  ;  small  tree  ;  6782  :  Petals  lilac  at  tip  ; 
climber  ;  6801  ( ?) .    Distrib.  Tenasserim. 

OLACINEAE. 

40.  Erythropalum  scandens,  Bl. 

Nam  Chut :  Flowers  yellow  ;  chmber  ;  6681.  Distrib. 
India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

CELASTRINEAE. 

41.  Euonymus  javanicus,  Bl. 

Tapli  :  Tree  ;  petals  green,  purphsh  brown  at  base  ; 
6972.    Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

42.  Microtropis  discolor,  WaU. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  2  ft.  high  ;  6985:  White  ;  6  ft.  liigh ; 
6999  and  6838. 


86  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

43.  Hippocratea    ferruginea,    King,     {Salacia    Griffithii, 

Laws) . 
Nam  Chut :   Flowers  white,   stamens  tipped  yellow. 
Distrih.  Trang,  Peninsular  Siam. 

44.  Salacia  flavescens,  Korth. 

Delisle  Island  off  Takuapa  :  Yellow  to  salihon-red  ; 
6939.  Tapli  :  Wliite,  stamens  yellow  ;  6774  (var.  ovalis) . 
Distrih.    Tenasserim  and  Malay  Peninsula. 

45.  Salacia  grandiflora,  Kurz. 

Nam  Chut  :  Flowers  white  ;  bush  ;  6666  :  Fruit  scarlet ; 
6691. 

46.  Salacia  latifolia,  Wall. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  dull  greenish-yellow,  centres 
dark  greenish  brown  ;  6554.    Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula. 

47.  Salacia  viminea.  Wall. 

Koh  Gah  :  Flowers  greenish  yellow  ;  bush,  6  ft.  ;  6601. 
Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula. 

48.  Salacia  verrucosa,  Wight. 

Nam  Chut  :  Greenish  yeUow  ;  shrub  ;  6706.  Tasan  : 
Yellowish  green  ;  climber  ;  6947. 

The  latter  with  rather  thinner  and  smaller  leaves. 
Distrih.  Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

49.  Salacia  garcinioides  sp.  nov. 

Shrubby,  branches,  rather  slender.  Leaves  alternate 
or  sub-opposite,  elliptic,  blunt,  cuspidate,  coriaceous  ;  nerves 
inconspicuous,  7  pairs,  4  in.  long,  1  •  75  in.'  wide,  petiole  •  25 
in.  long  ;  young  leaves  thinner  and  more  fleshy,  drying 
orange.  Flowers  small  in  axillary  fascicles  of  13  or  14  on 
small  tubercles  with  minute  persistent  ovate  bracts. 
Pedicels  slender  '5  in.  long.  Sepals  very  short,  rounded, 
ovate.  Petals  5,  oblong,  fleshy,  keeled  on  the  back. 
Stamens  3,  sunk  in  the  disc.  Style  very  short,  hardly  pro- 
jecting.   Tasan  :  Yellowish  green  ;  climber  ;  6875  (?). 

The  specimens  have  much  the  appearance  of  a  Garci- 
nia.  The  httle  yellowish  flowers  in  fascicles  are  not  very 
like  any  other  species. 

RHAMNEAE. 

50.  Zizyphus  oenoplia,  Mill.  var.  ornata,  var.  nov. 

Climber  ;  branches  and  nerves  beneath,  leaves  densely 
bright  red,  tomentose.  Mamoh  :  climber  ;  yellowish  green  ; 
6917.  Distrih.  India,  Malay  Peninsula  to  the  Islands.  The 
pretty  form  described  above  was  collected  in  Tenasserim 
by  Heifer. 

51.  Colubrina  asiatica,  Brngn. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Fruit  brown  ;  tree  ;  6551. 

AMPELIDEAE. 

52.  Vitis  Hookeri,  Laws. 

Tasan  :  Firuit  brown  ;  climber  ;  7022  :  Greenish  yellow  ; 
7042.    Distrih.  India. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  87 

53.  Vitis  Robinsonii,  sp.  nov. 

Stems  slender,  herbaceous,  4-angled  below,  young  parts 
hairy,  red.  Leaves  herbaceous,  simple,  glabrous  when 
adult,  oblong-lanceolate,  base  broad  rounded  or  cordate  with 
round  lobes,  edge  closely  toothed,  apex  acuminate  ;  nerves 
elevate,  keeled  and  sinuate  on  the  back,  8  pairs,  2-3  in.  long, 
•75-1*25  in.  wide  ;  petiole  '2  in.  long  ;  stipules  oblong,  tip 
broadly  rounded,  •  1  in.  long.  Tendrils  rather  long,  simple  ; 
corymbs  -3  in.  wide,  subsessile,  many  flowered,  dense, 
pubescent.  Flowers  yellow.  Pedicels  -15  in.  long  or  much 
shorter.  Calyis:  cupular  with  an  undulate  4-lobed  edge. 
Petals  oblong,  blunt,  -05  in.,  yellow  tipped  red,  4.  Style 
rather  long.  Tasan  :  Yellow,  petals  tipped  red  externally  ; 
stems  and  qalyx  red  ;  leaves  veined  red  ;  climber  ;  6942. 

This  pretty  vine  is  allied  to  V.  discolor,  Dalz.  but  is 
pubescent  with  winged  nerves  on  the  leaf  backs,  closely 
toothed  leaves  and  sub-sessile  inflorescence. 

SAPINDACEAE. 

54.  Erioglossum  edule,  Bl. 

Taph  :  White  ;  6787.     Distrib.  Indo-Malaya. 

STAPHYLEACEAE. 

55.  Turpinia  martabanica,  Wall. 
(Label  lost).     Distrib.  Burma. 

ANACARDIACEAE. 

56.  Anacardium  occidentale,  L. 

Koh  Gah  :  Bushy  tree  ;  flowers  white  to  pink  ;  6600 
and  6602.  Distrib.  Tropics  generally.  Native  of  South 
America. 

57.  Buchanania  acuminata,.  Turcz. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Flowers  white,  fruits  brownish-red  ; 
large  bush  ;  6567.     Distrib.  Tenasserim,  Malay  Penmsula. 

58.  Gluta  Tavoyana,  Hook.  fil. 

Nam  Chut  :  Flower  yellowish  ;  calyx  crimson  ;  fruit 
purple-green  ;  shrub,  4  ft.  ;  6690.     Distrib.  Tenasserim. 

This  is  certainly  near  G.  elegans  of  Penang  but  the 
flowers  are  smaller.  The  fruit  is  obliquely  round-elliptic, 
flattened,  1-5  in.  long,  1-25  in.  wide  and  about  -25  in. 
through. 

59.  Gluta  coarctata,  Hook.  fil. 

Taph  :  White  tinged  with  pink  at  the  top,  6809.  Tree 
40  ft.     Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 

MELIACEAE. 

60.  Sandoricum  nervosum,  Bl. 
Mamoh  :  Green  ;  tree  ;  6701. 

61.  Aglaia  odoratissima,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  Yellow  ;  large  tree  ;  6898.  Distrib.  Malay 
Peninsula. 


88  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

62.  Aglaia  ienuicaulis,  Hiem. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  yellowish  brown  ;  6979.  Distrib.  Malay 
Peninsula. 

63.  Amoora  racemosa,  sp.  nov. 

Tree  30  ft.  taU.  Leaves  12  in.  long,  leaflets  7,  elliptic 
obovate,  shortly  blunt,  acuminate,  thinly  coriaceous, 
glabrous  ;  nerves  9  pairs,  rather  slender,  elevate  beneath, 
7-5  in.  long,  3*5  in.  wide,  petiolule  -2  in.  long,  swollen  at 
base.  Racemes  2-3  together,  very  slender  up  to  a  foot 
long,  glabrous  with  flowers  •  15  in.  apart,  scattered.  Pedi- 
cels •  1  in.  long.  Flowers  globose,  white.  Sepals  5,  round 
free,  ciliate,  pubescent  on  the  edge.  Corolla  •  1  in.  long  ; 
lobes  imbricate  4,  two  outer  ones  coriaceous.  Staminal 
tube  round,  lobes  rounded,  anthers  on  the  inner  face  below 
the  lobes  8,  oblong.  Ovary  small,  hairy  ;  style  stout,  rather 
long.  Stigma  orbicular,  flat.  Tasan  ;  calyx  green  ;  centre 
white  ;  7039. 

This  species. approaches  the  Aphanamixis  section  in  its 
slender  inflorescence  of  scattered  flowers,  but  the  flowers 
are  much  smaller  and  pedicelled,  the  stamens  only  8. 

CONNARACEAE. 

64.  Rourea  intermedia,  sp.  nov. 

Leaves  4  in.  long,  rachis  slender,  puberulous,  leaflets 
over  20,  coriaceous  pubescent  beneath,  above  shining, 
oblong,  shortly  blunt  acuminate,  base  rounded  ;  nerves  about 
8  pairs,  obscure,  reticulations  and  nervules  as  conspicuous 
on  both  sides,  1 — 1*5  in.  long,  -5  in.  wide  ;  petiolule  minute. 
Flowers  not  seen.  Fruit-spikes  3  in.  long,  pubescent. 
Calyx  in  fruit  •  12  in.  long,  lobes  round.  Carpels  '5  in.  long, 
upper  part  recurved,  blunt,  glabrous.  Seed  ellipsoid  quite 
covered  by  aril.  (Label  missing).  This  species  allied  to 
R.  parallela  has  the  leaflets  narrowed  to  a  blunt  point. 
They  are  very  variable  is  size  and  shape,  some  being  almost 
ovate. 

65.  Connarus  paniculatus,  Roxb. 

Nam  Chut :  Flowers  white,  stamens  tipped  yellow ;  6683. 
Distrib.  India  to  Tenasserim. 

66.  Connarus  semidecandrus.  Jack. 

Tapli :  Fruit  green  ;  bush  ;  6775.  Distrib.  India,  Malay 
Peninsula. 

67.  Ellipanthus  Helferi,  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  :  3  ft.  high  ;  fruit  yellow.  This  species  was  only 
known  from  some  flowering  specimens  collected  in  Tenas- 
serim or  Andamans  (locality  doubtful)  by  Heifer.  The  plant 
sent  by  Mr.  Kloss  is  in  fruit.  The  foliage  and  pubescent 
branches  resemble  Heifer's  plant  and  I  assume  it  to  be  the 
same,  though  with  a  little  doubt  as  I  have  no  flowers  of  this 
nor  fruit  of  Heifer's  plant.     The  fruit  is  in  a  stout  raceme 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  89 

of  14  capsules,  1  in.  long  with  a  stalk  •  25  in.  long,  all  closely 
velvety,  the  body  of  the  capsule  •  5  in.  tlirough,  terminating 
in  a  short  curved  and  hooked  beak. 


LEGUMINOSAE. 

68.  Crotalaria  saltiana,  Andr. 

TapH  :  Yellow  ;  6793.     Distrih.  Tropical  Asia. 

69.  Vigna  retusa,  Walp. 

Klong  Bagatae,  sea  beach  :  Yellow  ;  6584  Distrih. 
Indo-Malaya. 

70.  Flemingia  congesta,  Roxb. 

Tasan  :  Green,  striped  dull  crimson,  lateral  petals  car- 
mine ;  4  f  t.  ;  6885.     Distrih.  Indo-Malaya. 

71.  Adinobotrys  atropurpureus,  Dunn. 

Tapli  :  Dull  crimson,  hood  green  in  centre  near  the 
base  ;  tree  ;  6790.     Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula. 

72.  Pongamia  glabra,  Vent. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Lilac,  sepals  brownish-crimson  ;  fruit 
dull  green  ;  tree  ;  6552  and  6553.  Delisle  Island  off'  Renong  ; 
Mauve  white  ;  fruit  greenish  brown  ;  tree  ;  6641.  The  fruit 
in  this  specimen  is  abnormal,  apparently  attacked  by  some 
insect  and  forming  a  globose  woody  2-celled  ball.  Distrih. 
Sea  coasts,  India  and  Malaya. 

73.  Derris  uliginosa,  Bcnth. 

Nam  Chut  :  Pinkish-white  ;  shrub  ;  4  ft,  ;  6694. 
Distrih.  Indo-Malaya,  Polynesia. 

74.  Derris  elliptica,  Bentli. 

Tapli  :  White  at  tip,  crimson  at  base  ;  bush.  Perhaps 
wild  here  but  often  cultivated.     "  Tuba." 

75.  Derris  amoena,  Benth. 

Delisle  Island  oft'  Takuapa  ;  lake  to  pink  ;  climber  ; 
6642  :  Crimson  to  white  ;  stem  twisted  30-40  yai'ds  long  ; 
6648.     Distrih.  Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

76.  Derris  sp, 

Tasan  :  climber  ;  6846.  A  very  pubescent  species  but 
specimens  too  young. 

77.  Sophora  tomentosa,  L. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  tree  ;  leaves  grey,  green  on  reverse  ; 
6548.     Distrih.  Tropics  generally. 

78.  Bauhinia  bracteata,  Graham. 

Tapli  :  Greenish  yellow  ;  climber  ;  6795.  Nam  Chut  : 
Yellowish  white  with  crimson  veins  ;  6661.  Distrih.  Siam 
to  North  Malay  Peninsula. 

79.  Cassia  fistula,  L. 

Mamoh  :  Lemon  yellow,  stalks  of  stamens  green  ;  6713. 
Wild  in  India,  often  planted  elsewhere. 

4 


90  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

80.  Albizzia  myriophylla,  Benth. 

Koh  Gah  :  Bush  or  climber ;  inllorescence  yellowish 
brown ;  6609. 

RHIZOPHOREAE. 

81.  Ceriops  Roxburghiana,  Arn. 

Koh  Gah  :  A  bushy  tree  in  mangroves  ;  green,  stamens 
brownish  pink  ;  6599.  Distrib.  E.  Africa,  India,  Malaya, 
Australia. 

82.  Carallia  lucida,  Kurz. 

Nam  Chut :  Flowers  green,  stamens  brown  ;  tree  ;  6682. 
Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 

COMBRETACEAE. 

83.  Combretum  Klossii,  sp.  nov. 

Tree  :  Branches  slender,  tomentose.  Leaves  elliptic, 
subacute  or  blunt,  shinmg,  pubescent,  hairy  on  the  nerves 
beneath  3  in.  long,  1  •  25  in.  wide ;  nerves  7  pairs,  slender, 
petiole  •  25  in.  Flowermg  branches  slender,  pubescent  hairy, 
in  large  terminal  panicles  with  leaf-like  bracts  at  base  of 
branches.  Cymes  scattered  remote  with  a  pair  of  leaf-Uke 
branches,  •  25  in.  long,  at  base  narrow,  linear.  Flowers  •  05 
in.  wide,  white,  hairy  outside.  Ovary  sessile,  short,  hairy. 
Sepals  smaU  lanceolate.  Petals  lanceolate  acute,  little 
longer.     Stamens  as  long.     Disc  glabrous,  lobed. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  white  ;  ti'ee  ;  6556. 

Allied  to  C.  decandrum,  Roxb.,  but  with  much  more 
slender  sprays  of  flowers,  the  flowers  being  distant  and  not 
congested  with  large  floral  bracts  as  in  that  species. 

84.  Combretum  extensum,  Roxb. 

Pulau  Mohea  :  Petals  white,  head  of  stamens  brown  ; 
general  colour  of  flower  pale  greenish  yellow  ;  woody 
climber  ;  6533  and  6528.    Distrib.  India  to  Malay  Peninsula. 

85.  Calycopteris  floribunda,  Lam. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Tree  ;  fruit  green  ;  6553.  Distrib.  India 
and  North  Malay  Peninsula. 

86.  Quisqualis  densiflora,  Wall. 

Tasan  :  Flowers  red  or  white ;  climber ;  6891. 
Distrib.  Moulmein,  Malay  Peninsula. 

87.  Lumnitzera  coccmea,  W.  &  A. 
Koh  Gah  :  Tree  30  ft. ;  red  ;  6587. 

MYRTACEAE. 

88.  Eugenia  formosa.  Wall. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  tree  ;  6843.  Taph  :  Pink  ;  tree  ;  6800. 
Distrib.  India  to  Tcnasserim. 

89.  Eugenia  rubida,  sp.  nov. 

Tree  :  Branchlets  above  with  red  flaky  bark,  slender. 
Leaves   rather   thin,   coriaceous,   oblong   lanceolate,   base 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  91 

narrowed  blunt,  tip  shortly  blunt,  acuminate  ;  nerves  10 
pairs  with  occasional  nearly  as  prominent  intermediate 
ones,  inarching  •  1  in.  from  the  edge,  5  in.  long,  1  •  75  in. 
wide  ;  midrib  prominent,  petiole  -25  in.  long,  rather  thick. 
Flowers  3  to  4  terminal ;  pedicels  thick  •  1  in.  long.  Calyx 
funnel-shaped,  -4  in.  long,  lobes  -25  in.  long,  persistent. 
Petals  broad,  sub-orbicular,  -6  in.  long.  Stamens  very 
numerous,  -5  in.  long.  Fruit  globose,  narrowed  just  below 
calyx  lobes,  closely  finely  ribbed  from  base,  •  75  in.  through. 
Tasan  :  crimson,  tipped  buff  ;  tree  ;  6906.  Tapli  :  Calyx 
pink  ;  stamens  tipped  huffy  ;  6766. 

90.  Eugenia  acuminatissima,  Kurz. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  green  ;  large  tree  ;  6900.  Distrib.  South 
to  Malay  Peninsula. 

91.  Eugenia  leptantha,  Wight. 

Tapli  :  Fruit  green  ;  6740.     Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 

92.  Eugenia  zeylanica,  Wight. 

Delisle  Island  off  Takuapa  :  Flowers  greenish  white  ; 
fruits  white  ;  tree  ;  6643.  Takuapa  Mainland  :  Flowers 
greenish  white  ;  6614.  Koh  Gab  :  Flowers  greenish  white  ; 
tree  ;  6588  and  6589.  Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula  and 
Islands. 

All  the  specimens  quoted  above  are  remarkable  for  their 
persistent  bracts,  sub-spa thulate  at  the  base  of  the  cymes  and 
to  each  flower.  The  flowers  arc  in  a  very  young  state,  and  in 
the  fruiting  specimen  the  bracts  are  all  fallen. 

93.  Eugenia  punctifolia,  sp.  nov. 

Tree.  Leaves  thin,  sub-coriaceous,  elliptic,  narrowed 
gradually  to  the  base,  shortly  acutely  acuminate  ;  nerves 
horizontal  above,  22  pairs,  rather  fine  with  the  secondary 
nervules  nearly  as  prominent,  meeting  in  a  nearly  straight 
intramarginal  vein  close  to  the  edge  ;  on  the  underside  are 
scattered  pustules  on  the  reticulations,  4-5  in.  long,  2  in. 
wide,  upper  side  dotted  with  translucent  glands,  petiole  •  25 
in.  long.  Cymes  in  uppermost  axils,  peduncle  1  in.  long, 
branches '75  in.  long.  Flowers  crowded  at  summit.  Calyx 
obconic  .1  in.  long,  margin  undulate.  Petals  free,  obovate, 
round,  small.  Stamens  short,  hardly  '1  in.  long.  Fruit 
oblong,  globose  •  12  in.  long,  sessile  with  hardly  any  trace 
of  calyx-lobes.  Tapli  :  White ;  tree ;  6799.  Mamoh  : 
Greenish  white  ;  tree  ;  6704. 

In  some  respects  this  is  allied  to  E.  oblongifolia,  but  the 
petals  are  free  and  not  calyptrate. 

94.  Barringtonia  acutangula,  Gaertn. 

Nam  Chut :  Caimine,  calyx  green  ;  tree  8  ft. ;  6670. 
Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

95.  Careya  arborea,  Roxb. 

Tasan  :  Dull  greenish-brown,  beard  blackish  ;  6832. 
Distrib,  India  to  North  Malay  Peninsula. 


92  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums,  [Vol.  X, 

MELASTOMACEAE. 

96.  Melastoma  normale,  Don. 

Nam  Chut  ;  6665.     Distrib.  India  and  Malaya. 

97.  Otanthera  bracteata,  Korth. 

Tasan  :  Magenta  ;  7050.  Distrib.  Mergui  and  Malay 
Islands. 

98.  Sonerila  ciliata,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  woody,  angled,  and  winged,  red,  scurfy  pubescent, 
12  in.  tall.  Leaves  membranous,  obliquely  elliptic  lanceo- 
late, base  narrowed,  edge  serrulate,  spinulosc  ;  nerves  3 
pairs,  upper  leaves  spotted  with  large  white  spots  with  a 
central  dark-coloured  pustule,  3-4  in.  long,  1  •  75  in.  wide  ; 
petiole  •  25  in.  long.  Young  leaves  in  bud  purple,  glandular 
hairy.  Flowers  not  seen.  Capsules  quite  smooth,  -25  in. 
long,  pedicel  •  1  in.,  valves  4,  incurved,  secund  on  a  peduncle 
•5  in.  long.  Tasan  :  Leaves  spotted  white  ;  reverse  dull 
crimson  ;  6982. 

I  do  not  know  any  species  really  like  this,  the  woody 
angled  and  winged  stem,  and  quite  smooth  rounded  capsules 
are  very  distinct.  The  leaves  are  not  always  spotted  and 
are  sub-equal  and  similar. 

99.  Memecylon  coeruleum,  Jack. 

Pulau  Mohea  otf  Trang  :  Fruit  greenish-pink  ;  6536. 
Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

100.  Memecylon  grande  var.  Merguica,  Clarke. 

Tapli :  Fruit  red  ;  tree  ;  6757.     Distrib.  Tenasserim. 

101.  Memecylon  edule,  Roxb. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  10  ft.  ;  6892  :  White,  stamens  violet 
tipped  yellow  ;  7047.     Distrib.  Indo-Malaya. 

102.  Memecylon  garcinioides,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  Blue,  dark  and  hght ;  stamens  tipped  yellow  ; 
6844.    Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

103.  Memecylon  corticosum,  sp.  nov. 

Branches  terete  with  4  thin  corky  wings.  Leaves 
lanceolate,  base  round,  tip  long,  acuminate,  drying  pale 
green  ;  nerves  about  20  pairs,  sunk  above,  prominent  but 
slender  beneath,  secondary  nerves  and  reticulations  visible, 
7  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  petiole  hardly  •  08  in.  long.  Flowers 
small  in  short  fascicled  axillary  cymes,  peduncle  •  1  in.  long, 

Sedicel  as  long.     Calyx  campanulate,  •  1  in.,  truncate.     Disc 
at  rayed.     Flowers  smaller  than  in  M.  heteropleurum. 

Tasan  :  Dark  crimson  ;  7027.  Most  nearly  allied  to 
M.  heteropleurum^  but  I  think  it  can  hardly  be  a  form  of 
that. 

ONAGRACEAE. 

104.  Jussieua  exaltata,  Roxb. 

Tasan  :  Lemon-yellow  ;  1  foot.  Distrib.  India,  Malay 
Peninsula. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  93 

CUCURBITACEAE. 

105.  Gynostemma  crenulatum,  sp.  nov. 

Climber,  very  slender.  Stems  glabrous,  angled  and 
grooved.  Tendrils  simple,  slender.  Leaves  trifoliate,  cen- 
tral leaflets  largest,  sub-coriaceous,  glabrous,  elliptic,  ovate, 
blunt  edge  crenulate  with  a  short  spine  in  each  notch  ;  nerves 
5  pairs,  elevate  beneath,  2-2-5  in.  long,  1-5  in.  wide; 
petiolule  -1  in.,  petiole  1  in.  long.  Panicles  lax,  spreading, 
hairy,  about  7  in.  long.     Flowers  (onh-^  males  seen)  minute, 

{)edicels  very   short.      Sepals  lanceolate,   narrow.      Petals 
anceolate-acute,  rather  deeply  cut  (not  elongate  cuspidate). 
Anthers  5,  Tasan  :  Green  ;  climber  ;  6901. 

This  species  is  distinct  from  G.  pedata,  Bl.  in  the  stiff er 
leaflets,  not  serrate  but  with  a  few  long  crenulations,  in  the 
notch  of  each  a  short  spinelet.  The  flowers  differ  also  in 
the  short  lanceolate  corolla-lobes  with  only  a  short  point. 

ARALIACEAE. 

106.  Heptapleurum  venulosum.  Seem. 

Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  Tree ;  inflorescence 
greenish-white  ;  6631.     Distrih.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

RUBIACEAE. 

107.  Uncaria  attenuata,  Korth. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  stamens  tipped  brown  ;  climber  ;  7023. 
Distrih.  Tenasserim,  South  to  Singapore,  Sumatra. 

108.  Hedyotis  capitellata,  Wall. 

Nam  Chut  :  White  ;  creeper  ;  6663.  Tasan  :  Yellowish- 
white  ;  climber  ;  6893.  Distrih.  Tenasserim,  Malay  Penin- 
sula, Malay  Islands,  Yunnan. 

109.  Ophiorrhiza  hispidula,  Wall.  Cat.  6234. 

Tasan  :  Crimson  ;  6949  :  White  ;  4  ft.  ;  6896  :  Tips 
white,  base  dark  pink  ;  6963.     Distrih.  Tenasserim,  Java. 

110.  Mussaenda  variolosa,  Wall. 

Nam  Chut  :  Flowers  orange,  bracts  pale  yellow  ;  6650. 
Distrih.  Lower  Burmah  to  Tenasserim. 

111.  Greenia  Jackii,  W.  A  A. 

Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  Tree  ;  inflorescence  pink  to 
brownish  green  ;  6630.  Distrih.  Tenasserim,  Malay  Penin- 
sula. 

112.  Myrioneuron  capitata,  sp.  nov. 

Woody  unbranchcd  shrublet  2  ft.  tall.  Leaves  her- 
baceous, elliptic  oblanceolate,  glabrous,  narrowed  to  petiole ; 
nerves  21  to  22  pairs,  parallel  ascending  and  connate  in  an 
intramarginal  nerve,  midrib  rather  stout,  11  in.  long,  2-75 
in.  wide,  petiole  1  •  75  in.  long.  Stipules  narrow,  lanceolate, 
long  acuminate,  -75  in.  long.  Head  dense  compact  -5  in. 
through,  terminal  on  a  peduncle  1  in.  long.  Bracts  lanceo- 
late-acuminate as  long  as  the  flowers,  outer  bracts  round, 
broad,   -2  in.  long.     Sepals  lanceolate-acuminate.      Petals 


94  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

linear,  lanceolate-acuminate  shorter.  Stamens  very  small 
with  slender  filaments.  Style  rather  stout,  deeply  bifid  into 
2  linear  blunt  lobes  from  a  large  fleshy  disc.  Tasan :  White ; 
2  feet. 

Differs  in  its  small  compact  head  and  glabrous  corolla 
from  the  other  Indian  species. 

113.  Diplospora  stylosa,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  6  ft.  tall ;  branches  slender,  pale  glabrous. 
Leaves  thinly  coriaceous,  sub-herbaceous,  lanceolate-acumi- 
nate, cuspidate  at  both  ends,  nerves  6  pairs  fine,  elevate 
beneath,  5-5  in.  long,  1-5  in.  wide,  petiole  -25  in.  long. 
Stipules  subulate  from  a  broad  triangular  base,  •  1  in.  long. 
Flowers  small,  few  on  a  short  axillary  raceme,  •  1  in.  long, 
glutinous,  shining.  Calyx  campanulate,  narrowed  below 
the  limb  with  4  acute  triangular  teeth.  Corolla  yellowish, 
tubular  •  1  in.  long,  lobes  oblong  ovate,  acute,  nearly  as  long 
as  the  tube,  mouth  of  tube  hairy  within.  Stamens  shortly 
exsert  from  tube.  Style  long  exsert  ;  stigma  deeply  bifid 
into  2  broad  lanceolate  lobes  nearly  as  long  as  corolla  lobes, 
long  exsert.  Fruit  ellipsoid  narowed  at  base  and  top  and 
crowned  with  calyx.  Tasan  :  Yellowish-white  ;  6  ft.  tall ; 
6834.  Near  D.  Kurzii  but  with  fewer  flowers  and  diff"erent 
venation. 

114.  Randia  fasciculata,  Lam. 

Tasan :  bush ;  white ;  6982.  Koh  Jam  Yai  off"  Takuapa ; 
White  ;  6625.     Distrib.  South  to  Malay  Peninsula. 

115.  Randia  parvula,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  5  to  8  feet  tall ;  bark  pale,  spines  •  4  in.  long,  ra- 
ther stout..     Leaves  coriaceous,  ovate  to  elliptic  lanceolate 

•  5  in.  long,  2  •  5  in.  long,  •  75  in.  wide  or  less,  one  or  two  pairs 
on  the  short  1-1-5  in.  branches,  petiole  very  short  ;  stipules 

•1  in.  long,  broad  at  base  with  a  subulate  point,  pubescent 
when  young.  Flowers  2  on  a  very  short  axillary  or  ter- 
minal peduncle  with  several  imbricate,  ovate  acuminate 
bracts.  Pedicel  -1  in.  long,  glabrous.  Calyx  '25  in.  long, 
campanulate,  hairy  with  5  long  setaceous  points.  Corolla 
tube  slender,  •  5  in.  long,  curved,  lobes  oblong  acute,  •  25  in. 
long.  Stamens  ;  anthers  acuminate,  exsert.  Stigma  club- 
bed. Fruit  globose,  -25  in.  through,  pubescent,  crowned 
with  the  persistent  calyx-tube.  Koh  Gah  :  Thorny  bush  5  to 
8  feet ;  white  ;  scented  ;  6608.  Allied  to  jR.  fasciculata  but 
leaves  and  flowers  much  smaller,  leaves  more  coriaceous. 

116.  Randia  densiflora,  Benth. 

Tasan  :  Pale  greenish-yellow,  almost  white  ;  15  ft. ; 
6867  :  yellowish  ;  tree  ;  6934.  Distrib.  Assam  to  Singapore 
and  Travancore,  Malay  Islands,  S.  China. 

117.  Randia  Klossi,  sp.  nov. 

Climber,  glabrous  with  pairs  of  axillary  spines,  '3  in. 
long,  slightly  curved.  Leaves  thinly  coriaceous,  elhptic, 
base  rounded  or  very  shortly  narrowed,  tip  rather  abruptly 
acute,  5  in.  long,  2  in.  wide  ;  nerves  5  pairs  usually  faint ; 
petiole  •  3  in.  long.    Stipules  broad,  ovate,  triangular,  keeled 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  95 

with  a  strong  point.  Cymes  of  3  or  4  flowers  in  the  axils  ; 
peduncle  short,  thick  ;  bracts  ovate  ;  pedicel  short  and  thick. 
Calyx  tubular,  funnel-shaped,  -25  in.  long  with  very  short 
sub-ovate  lobes.  Corolla-tube  1*5  in.  long,  slender,  cylin- 
dric,  lobes  linear  oblong  -5  in.  long  by  '15  in.  wide,  pubes- 
cent on  the  upper  face  just  above  the  mouth.  Stamens  in- 
cluded except  the  extreme  tips.  Style  little  longer  thten  the 
corolla-tube,  clubbed  at  tip,  Tasan  :  Pale  yellowish  white 
to  yellow  ;  strong  scent  ;  climber  ;  6872.  Allied  to  R.  frag- 
rantissimay  Ridl.  and  R.  Clarkeiy  but  the  leaves  are  hardly 
coriaceous. 

118.  Gardenia  tubifera,  Wall. 

Tapli :  fruit  green  ;  6749.  Distrib.  Tenasserim,  Malay 
Peninsula. 

119.  Guettarda  speciosa,  L. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  white  ;  tree  ;  6557.  Distrib.  Sea 
shores  of  Trop.  Asia. 

120.  Canthium  trachystyle,  sp.  nov. 

Glabrous  shrub.  Leaves  coriaceous  in  distant  pairs, 
lanceolate,  base  round,  tip  acuminate  ;  nerves  4  pairs  deeply 
sunk  above  prominent  beneath,  3  in.  long,  1-25  in.  wide, 
petiole  -2  in.  long.  Stipules  short,  subulate.  Racemes 
axillary  and  terminal  very  short,  •  1  in.  with  numerous  small 
ovate  hairy  bracts.  Pedicels  slender,  '15  in.  long.  Calyx 
campanulate  with  short  indistinct  teeth.  Corolla  tube  very 
short  •  15  in.  and  broad,  lobes  5,  twice  as  long,  linear-oblong, 
sub-acute,  mouth  with  a  ring  of  prominent  hairs.  Style 
much  exsert,  in  the  middle  a  dense  mass  of  hairs.  Stigma 
large,  oblong  deeply  cut  into  2  points.  Ovary  2-celled,  one 
ovule  in  each  cell. 

Tapli  :  Bush  ;  6760.  Very  unlike  any  species  known  to 
me  in  its  stifl'  leaves  and  long  hairy  style. 

121.  Ixora  merguensis.  Hook.  fil. 

Tapli :  Flowers  white  ;  6772.     Distrib.  Mergui. 

122.  Ixora  spectabilis,  Wall. 

Nam  Chut :  Inflorescence  yellow  ;  shrub  ;  6668.  Klong 
Bagatae  :  Calyx  pink  ;  fruit  white  ;  10-12  ft.  ;  6562.  Distrib. 
Burma,  Tenasserim. 

123.  Ixora  diversifolia,  Wall.  Cat. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Flowers  white  ;  carmine  at  base  ;  10 
ft.  tall ;  6580.  Probably  only  a  form  of  /.  pendulay  Jack 
Distrib.  Martaban,  Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

124.  Ixora  stricta,  Roxb.  (/.  amoena,  Wall.). 

Takuapa  Inlet,  Mainland  :  Yellow  to  deep  orange  ;  5  to 
8  ft.  ;  6617  ;  small  and  close-leaved  form.  Delisle  Island, 
off  Takuapa  :  Yellow  to  salmon  red  ;  6639.  Pulau  Mohea 
off  Trang  :  Salmon,  throat  pink  ;  6  to  8  ft.  ;  6529  ;  big  leaved 
form,  leaves  7  by  3  in.  Klong  Bagatae  :  Salmon  to  yellow  ; 
6  to  10  ft.  ;  6571.  Tasan  :  Salmon  to  yellow  ;  9  ft.  ;  6992. 
A  form  with  narrow  lanceolate  leaves,  6  m.  long  by  1  '25  in. 


96  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

wide,  resembling  a  form  of  /.  Lobbii ;  but  the  flowers  of 
/.  amoena.  Koh  Jam  Yai  off"  Takuapa  ;  Apricot  yellow  to 
red  ;  6-10  ft.  ;  6627.  /.  stricta  is  a  common,  conspicuous 
and  very  variable  plant.  It  occurs  from  India,  South  all 
over  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

125.  Ixora  congesta,  Roxb. 

Tapli  :  6  f t.  ;  Flowers  red,  salmon  scarlet  to  apricot 
yellow  ;  6821.  Nam  Chut  :  Red  ;  6670.  Distrih.  Tenas- 
serim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

126.  Ixora  nigricans,  Br. 

Tapli :  bush,  5  ft.     Distrih.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

127.  Ixora  opaca,  Br. 

Nam  Chut :  Flowers  pinkish-white.  Distrih.  Martaban, 
Siam,  Penang. 

128.  Coffea  merguensis,  sp.  nov. 

Bush  with  slender  twigs.  Leaves  at  end  of  twigs  few, 
lanceolate,  narrowed  to  both  ends,  acuminate  blunt,  thin 
coriaceous  ;  nerves  5  to  6  pairs,  2  in.  long,  •  75  in.  wide, 
petiole  •  15  in.  stipules  short,  forming  a  tube,  blunt.  Flowers 
few  in  the  terminal  axils.  Bract  lanceolate,  longer  than  the 
calyx.  Calyx  very  short  campanulate  with  5  minute  teeth. 
Corolla  white,  tube  slender,  nearly  -5  in.  long,  glabrous 
inside,  lobes  lanceolate  acute,  nearly  as  long  as  tube. 
Stamens  ;  anthers  very  long,  linear,  half  exsert. 

Tapli :  White  ;  bush  ;  6806.  Distrih.  Tenasserim 
(Heifer)  ;  Mergui  (Griffith).  This  plant  was  confused  by 
Hooker  with  C.  fragrans,  Wallich,  a  very  distinct  plant  from 
Sylhet  with  much  larger  leaves  and  flowers  :  it  is  nearer 
C  travancorica,  W.  &  A.,  which  occurs  in  South  India. 

129.  Morinda  citrifolia,  L. 

Pulau  Mohea  off  Trang  :  Flowers  white  ;  6538.  Wild 
and  cultivated  all  over  Eastern  Asia. 

130.  Morinda  elliptica,  Ridl. 

Nam  Chut  :  White  ;  6671.  Pulau  Mohea  off  Trang  : 
Flowers  white  ;  tree,  30  to  40  ft.  ;  6530. 

131.  Rennellia  speciosa,  Hook.  fil. 

TapU  :  Pale  lilac,  yellowish  at  centre  ;  5  ft.  tall ;  6770. 
Nam  Chut  :  Pale  violet  to  violet ;  shrub  ;  6660  and  6662. 
Tasan  :  Pale  violet ;  15  ft.     Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula. 

132.  Prismatomeris  malayana,  Ridl. 

Delisle  Island  off  Takuapa  :  White  ;  scented  ;  12  ft.  ; 
6647.     Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula. 

133.  Prismatomeris  Griffithii,  sp.  nov. 

Tree  :  Branches  slender,  pale.  Leaves  sub-coriaceous 
thin  elliptic,  shortly  blunt  acuminate,  under  side  of  leaf  pale 
yellowish  when  dry  ;  nerves  6  pairs,  pale,  distinct,  3*5  in. 
long,  1*75  in.  wide,  petiole  -1  in.  Stipules  very  inconspic- 
uous caducous.  Flowers  in  falsely  terminal  cymes  of  3, 
peduncles  very  short,  '05  in.     Calyx  campanulate,  funnel- 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  97 

shaped  •  1  in.  long  with  5  minute  teeth.  Corolla  tube  •  5  in. 
long,  glabrous  within  lobes  linear  undulate,  a  strong  rib 
outside  and  2  inside,  -5  in.  long.  Stamens  5  in  a  slightly 
dilate  portion  of  tube  below  the  mouth  linear,  apiculate. 
Style  long  exsert  half  as  long  as  corolla-lobes.  Fruit  unripe, 
globose,  narrowed  to  the  persistent  calyx.  Tasan  :  White  ; 
tree ;  6940.  Mergui  (Griffith) .  This  together  with  P. 
malayana  as  well  as  probably  several  other  species  was  con- 
fused by  Hooker  in  the  Flora  of  British  India  with  the 
very  distinct  P.  alhidiflora,  Thw.,  of  Ceylon.  P.  Griffithii 
differs  from  the  Malay  Peninsula,  P.  malayana,  in  the  very 
short  petiole  and  pedicels,  and  much  longer  calyx. 

134.  Psychotria  sarmentosa,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  Greenish  white  ;  cBmber  ;  6977.  Distrib.  India, 
Malay  Peninsula. 

135.  Psychotria  Jackii,  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  2  f  t.  ;  6871.     Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 

136.  Psychotria  auriculata,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  6  to  8  ft.  tall,  glabrous.  Leaves  oblanceolate, 
shortly  blunt,  acuminate  sessile,  narrowed  to  a  blunt 
auricled  base  ;  nerves  10  pairs,  elevate,  secondary  nerves 
finer,  conspicuous,  drying  grey  green,  8  in.  long,  2*75  in. 
wide.  Stipules  short,  coriaceous,  ovate-acuminate  with  a 
short  strong  pomt.  Cyme  -5  in.  long,  dense,  terminal  '5  in. 
long  with  a  short  thick  peduncle.  Flowers  numerous, 
greenish-white.  Calyx  short  cylindric  campanulate  with  5 
minute  teeth.  Corolla  •  15  m.  long,  tube  short  stout,  lobes 
as  long,  oblong  blunt,  5,  mouth  hairy.  Stamens  from  mouth 
of  tube  filaments  slender,  rather  long.  Anthers  short 
oblong.  Tasan  :  Greenish-white  ;  6  ft.  tall ;  6853  :  white  ; 
8  ft.  ;  6945. 

Tliis  belongs  to  the  stiff-leaved  pale  group  Griffithiiy 
etc.,  but  has  sessUe  auricled  leaves. 

137.  Psychotria  ?  lasiocephala,  sp.  nov. 

Hauy,  woody  shrub.  Leaves  thin,  coriacfeous  elhptic 
lanceolate,  grey,  glabrous  above,  closely  velvety  hairy 
beneath  ;  nerves  12  pairs,  6  in.  long,  1-75  in.  wide  ;  petiole 
•5  in.  long.  Stipules. large,  triangular,  subulate  connate  -5 
ia;  long.  Flowers  in  dense  globose  terminal  heads.  Bracts 
lanceolate.  Calyx-lobes  lanceolate,  large,  densely  covered 
and  fringed  with  long  purple  hairs.  CoroUa  very  short, 
glabrous,  lobes  oblong.  Stamens  5.  Style  very  short,  entire. 
Tapli  :  Inflorescence  green  ;  shrub. 

The  flowers  are  all  very  young,  so  it  is  difficult  to  be 
sure  it  is  a  Psychotria. 

138.  Chasalia  curviflora,  Thw. 

Tasan  :  Yellow,  outer  side  yellowish  white  tipped  with 
pink  ;  bush  ;  6923.     Distrib.  India  and  Malaya. 

139.  Lasianthus  flavescens,  King. 

Tasan  :  Wliite  ;  8  ft.  ;   6945  ;  4  f t.  ;   6973.     Distrib. 
Malay  Peninsula. 
5 


98  Journal  of  tki  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

140.  Lasianthus  ellipticus.  Wight. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  whitish  to  blue  at  base  ;  7007.  Distrib. 
Malay  Peninsula. 

141.  Lasianthus  (Litosanines)  glaberrima,  sp.  nov. 

Glabrous  shrub,  5  ft.  IkII.  Leaves  sub-coriaceous,  thin 
drying  grey,  elliptic,  rathev  long  acuminate,  base  round  ; 
nerves  fine,  7  pairs,  sub- sessile,  6  in.  long,  2  in.  wide. 
Stipules  breaking  up  into  fibres.  Peduncles  axillary  slender, 
1-5  in.  long.  Flowers  crowded  at  tip  on  a  short  peduncle, 
•1  in.  long.  Calyx-lobes  linear  rather  long.  Corolla  in 
bud  •  2  in.  long.  Fruit  ellipsoid,  narrowed  at  base  and  top, 
of  4  large  pyrenes  distinctly  lobed  when  dry,  -25  in.  long. 
Tasan  :  Fruit  mauve  ;  7033. 

The  specmiens  rather  too  far  over,  there  is  only  one 
bud  and  a  single  detached  fruit.  The  corolla  looks  rather 
long  tubed  for  this  genus,  but  I  cannot  make  it  out  to  be 
anything  else. 

COMPOSITAE. 

142.  Adenostemma  viscosum,  Forst. 
Tasan  :  Wliite  ;  1  foot.     Distrib.  Tropics. 

143.  Elephantopus  scaber,  L. 

Mamoh,  Pakchan  River  :  6703.  Distrib.  S.  American 
weed  all  over  tropical  Asia. 

144.  Blumea  myriocephalR,  DC. 

Tasan  :  Yellow  ;  7044.     Distrib.  India. 

145.  Blumea  membranac&i,  DC. 

Koh  Gah  :  YeUow  ;  6598.    Distrib.  India,  Malaya. 

146.  Pluchea  indica.  Less. 

Nam  Chut :  Pale  lilac  ;  bush  ;  6659.  Koh  Pipidon  ; 
6559  ?  Distrib.  Sunderbmis,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands, 
China. 

147.  Wedelia  biflora,  DC. 

Pulau  Mohea  off  Trang  :  Seashore ;  flower  yellow;  6587 ; 
Koh  Pipidon  :  3  ft.  higli ;  6545.     Distrib.  Tropics  of  Asia. 

CAMPANULACEAE. 

148.  Pentaphragma  begoniaefolia,  Wall. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  6994.     Distrib.  Mergui,  Penang. 

MYRSINACEAE. 

149.  Maesa  ramentacea,  Wall. 

Tapli  :  Fruit  green,  tipped  paler  ;  small  tree,  8  ft.  ; 
6804.     Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

150.  Maesa  integrifolia,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  1  foot  tall,  glabrous.  Leaves  thin  coriaceous, 
oblong  acuminate,  base  rounded,  tip  acute,  edge  entire  ; 
nerves  7  pairs  elevate  ben*  ath,  8  in.  long,  2  -  25  in.  wide ; 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  99 

petiole  -25  in.  long.  Racemes  fascicled,  slender,  -5  in.  to 
1-5  in.  long.  Bracts  lanceolate-acuminate  half  as  long  as 
the  pedicel  which  is  slender  -8  in.  long.  Sepals  very  small, 
round,  entire  not  glandular  nor  toothed.  Corolla-tube  as 
long  as  sepals,  globose  at  base  and  narrowed  abruptly  below 
the  limb,  lobes  5,  round,  imbricate.  Stamens  5,  anthers 
sub-sessile  on  the  mouth  of  the  tube,  style  cylindric  as  long 
as  tube.  Ovary  flattened  at  toD.  Fruit  ovoid  globose,  -1 
in.  long,  crowned  at  the  top  with  the  conspicuous  ovate-acute 
sepals.     Tasan  :  White,  tipped  pink  ;  1  foot  ;  6720. 

Very  distinct  in  the  entire  leaves,  only  the  younger  ones 
having  a  faint  trace  of  serration,  short  slender  raceme  and 
flask-shaped  corolla. 

151.  Maesa  indica,  DC. 

Tapli  :  White  ;  bush  ;  6738.  Distrib.  India,  Malay 
Peninsula. 

152.  Maesa  paniculata,  DC. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  climber  ;  6842.     Distrib.  Tenasserim. 

153.  Labisia  pothoina,  Lindl. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  6835.     Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

154.  Ardisia  complanata,  Wall 

Mamoh  :  Flowers  whitish,  sepals  crimson  ;  tree  ;  20  ft.  ; 
6715.     Distrib.    India,  Malaya. 

155.  Ardisia  Amherstiana,  Mez.  var.  lanceolata,  var  nov. 

Tapli  :  Mauve  pink  ;  small  tree,  20  ft.  ;  6785.  The 
leaves  of  this  plant  are  much  more  narrow  lanceolate  acumi- 
nate to  both  ends  than  they  are  in  the  typical  forms,  but  it 
does  not  appear  to  be  a  common  plant  and  has  seldom  been 
collected.     Distrib.  Tenasserim. 

156.  Ardisia  crenata,  Roxb. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Fruit  crim  son  ;  4  f t.  ;  6574.  Distrib. 
Common  in  open  country,  India  China,  Malaya. 

157.  Ardisia  villosa,  Roxb. 

TapU  :  White,  centre  buff  ;  4  ft.  high  ;  6747.  Tasan  : 
rose  pink,  centre  of  flower  dull  yellowish  ;  7013.  Distrib. 
Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

158.  Ardisia  bractescens,  sp.  nov. 

Unbranched  or  little  branched  shrub,  1  foot  tall  ;  stem 
woody  -12  in.  through.  Leaves  at  top  only.  Leaves  her- 
baceous, broad,  lanceolate-acuiainate,  base  cuneate,  edge 
crenate  gland-dotted  sparsely  on  both  sides,  glabrous,  6-5 
in.  long,  2-25  in.  wide,  petiole  •  1  j  in.  long,  Panicle  axillary 
1  in.  long,  few  flowered  ;  peduncles  and  pedicels  dotted  with 
minute  black  hairs.  Pedicel  •  3  m.  long.  Bracts  at  base  of 
pedicels  2,  oblong  in  pairs,  gland  dotted  •  1  in.  long.  Sepals 
lanceolate  acuminate  as  long  as  petals  or  longer  -18  in.  long, 
dotted  with  black  glands  and  :short  black  hairs.  Petals 
ovate-lanceolate  acuminate,  glf.ndular.     Stamens  shorter. 


100  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

elongate,  triangular,  back  rounded  with  a  row  of  black  dots 
down  the  back.  Style  shorter  than  the  stamens,  blunt. 
Tasan  :  Rose  pink  ;  6883. 

This  species  is  remarkable  for  its  rather  large  distinct 
bracts  and  short  petals. 

159.     Ardisia  (§  Pimelandra)  congesta,  sp.  nov. 

Small  tree  4  to  15  to  20  ft.  tall,  glabrous.  Leaves  thin, 
coriaceous,  elongate,  elhptic,  shortly  acuminate,  blunt,  base 
narrowed  blunt ;  nerves  20  pairs,  slender  elevate  beneath,  9 
in.  long,  2-25  in,  wide  ;  petiole  -25  in.  long.  Flowers  in 
dense  axillary  fascicles,  shorter  than  petiole,  glabrous. 
Pedicels  -05  in.  long.  Sepals  narrow,  oblong  blunt,  densely 
glandular.  Corolla  -25  in.  across.  Petals  lanceolate 
acuminate,  blunt,  glandular.  Stamens  lanceolate  acuminate, 
glandular.  Style  long  and  slender  shorter  than  stamens. 
All  glabrous.  Tasan  :  dull  crimson  ;  15  to  20  ft.  ;  6993  : 
crimson  ;  4  ft,  ;  6879.  Distinguished  from  Ardisia  pachyr 
sandra,  {Pimelandra  Wallichii)  and  Teysmanniana  by 
being  quite  glabrous,  the  flowers  much  smaller  on  very 
much  shorter  pedicels  with  longer  narrower  petals. 


EBENACEAE. 

160.  Diospyros  siamensis,  Hochr. 

Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  Tree  ;  flowers  apricot  yel- 
low ;  fruit  large,  egg-shaped,  green  with-  reddish  fur ; 
6632.     Distrih.  Siam  South  to  Kedah. 

161.  Diospyros  flavicans,  Hiern. 

Tasan  :  Yellow  ;  tree  20  ft.  ;  6874.  Distrih.  Tenasserim 
to  Malay  Peninsula. 

162.  Maba  merguensis,  Hiern. 

Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  Tree  ;  white  ;  20  ft.  Distrih. 
Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

OLEACEAE. 

163.  Jasminum  syringaefolium,  Wall. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  White  ;  bush  ;  6573  and  6572.  Distrih. 
Assam,  Tenasserim. 

164.  Jasminum  decussatum,  Wall. 

Nam  Chut,  Pakchan  Estuary  :  Flowers  white  ;  6652. 
Distrih.  Tenasserim  to  Kedah. 

165.  Jasminumi  puberulum,  n.  sp. 

Branches  puberulous.  Leaves  thinly  coriaceous  ovate 
acuminate  base  round,  glabrous  shining  when  adult ;  nerves 
4  pairs  inarching  elevate  beneath,  sunk  above,  4  in.  long, 
1*75  in.  wide,  petiole  -25  in.  Cymes  puberulous,  1-5  in. 
long  and  wide.  Calyx  cup-shaped  •  1  in.  long,  lobes  as  short, 
linear  hairy.  Corolla  white,  tube  stout,  -25  in.  long,  lobes 
8,  linear  siU^-acute,  as  long  as  the  tube. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  101 

Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  White  ;  climbing  bush  ; 
6(322.  AUied  to  J.  deciissatum  but  nearly  glabrous  and  with 
shorter  only  puberulous  hairy  calyx-lobes,  and  petals  dis- 
tinctly larger. 


APOCYNACEAE. 

166.  Rauwoliia  perakensis,  King. 

Tasan  :  Petals  red,  base  of  flower  white  ;  6912.  Distrih. 
Malay  Peninsula. 

167.  Alyxia  lucida.  Wall. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  White  climber  ;  6575.  Distrih.  Malay 
Peninsula. 

168.  Vallaris  macrantha,  Ridl.  n.  sp. 

Woody  shrub  15  ft.  tall.  Stem  -5  in.  through  with 
pith.  Leaves  membranous  orbicular  with  a  short  point, 
base  round,  minutely  pustular  above,  pubescent  beneath  ; 
nerves  6  pairs,  reticulations  conspicuous,  wide  beneath,  5*5 
in.  long,  5  in.  wide  ;  petiole  1  in.  long.  Compound  cymes 
axillary  lax,  6  in.  long  and  wide,  pubescent  tomentose. 
Bracts  caducous,  oblong  lanceolate,  acute,  '25  in.  long. 
Pedicels  -5  in.  long,  dilate  upwards,  slightly  tomentose. 
Sepals  5,  oblong,  recurved  or  patent,  -25  in.  long,  tomentose. 
Corolla  pale  yellowish  green,  tube  broad,  cylindric,  -25  in. 
long,  limb  1  m.  across,  base  broadly  obconic  pubescent, 
outside  and  on  the  inner  face  of  the  5  lobes  oblong-lanceo- 
late, -2  in.  long.  Stamens  on  the  mouth  of  the  cylindric 
tube,  base  hairy,  filaments  glabrous.  Anthers  conic  acumi- 
nate hastate,  hairy  at  base  and  tip  with  rather  long  deflexed 
spurs  at  base.  Style  densely  white  hairy  ;  ovary  bilobed 
globose,  densely  white  tomentose,  top  rounded.  Tapli  :  Pale 
yellowish  green  ;  15  ft.  ;  6946. 

This  remarkable  plant  is  only  allied  to  V.  grandiflora, 
Hemsley  of  China,  from  which  it  differs  conspicuously  in 
its  wide  spreading  axillary  compound  cymes,  entirely  whi- 
tish tomentose. 

169.  Cerbera  odoUam,  L. 

Koh  Gab  :  White  ;  opening  of  tube  only  red  ;  6604. 
Klong  Bagatae  :  White,  centre  red,  bush  ;  20  ft.  ;  6570. 
Distrib.  East  Asia. 

170.  Holarrhena  pauciflora,  Ridl. 

Mainland  shores  of  Takuapa  :  Flowers  white,  a  dull 
yellow  stripe  on  outside  of  petals  ;  6613.     Distrib.  Perils. 

171.  Holarrhena  densiflora,  Ridl. 
(Label  missing) .     Distrib.  Perils. 

172.  Ervatamia  subcapitata.  Wall. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  climber  ;  4  ft.  tall ;  7021  and  6824. 
Distrib.  Tavoy  to  Mergui. 


102  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

173.  Strophanthus  dichotomus,  DC. 

Tapli :  Petals  white,  tinged  yellow  and  streaked  crimson, 
tips  deep  crimson  ;  bush  ;  6762.  Tasan  :  Base  yellow,  dis- 
tally  dark  crimson  ;  6924.  Distrib.  Tenasserim,  Malay 
Peninsula  and  Java. 

174.  Strophanthus  Wallichii,  DC. 

Nam  Chut :  Pale  lilac  spotted  with  deep  crimson  ;  2-3 
ft.  ;  6689.    Distrib.  India. 

175.  Strophanthus  perakensis,  Scortechini. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  tree.  The  leaves  are  rather  thinner  and 
the  nerves  more  marked  than  in  the  rather  poor  type  I  have 
seen.     Distrib.  Perak. 

176.  Strophanthus  Jackianus,  Wall. 

Tapli  :  Crimson  ;  6764  :  Scarlet ;  bush  ;  6733.  This  is 
just  the  form  of  Wallicli's  type  with  the  broad  leaves  cover- 
ed with  hair  on  pustules  beneath.     Distrib.  Penang. 

177.  Aganosma  marginata,  Don. 

Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  Wliite  ;  scandent  shrub  ; 
6624.     Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

178.  Anodendron  paniculatum,  DC. 

Taph  :  Yellow  ;  4-6  ft.  tall.  Distrib.  India,  Malay 
Peninsula  and  Islands. 

179.  Anodendron  Candolleanum,  Wt. 

Mamoh  on  the  Pakchan  river  :  Brown  ;  tree  ;  6669.  In 
fruit.     Distrib.  Malacca,  Borneo. 

ASCLEPIADACEAE. 

180.  Hoya  parasitica.  Wall. 

Tasan  :  White,  central  star-shaped  portion  crimson  ; 
6909.     Distrib.  Assam  to  Malay  Peninsula. 

181.  Dischidia  hirsuta.  Dene. 

Tasan  :  Crimson  at  base,  pink  distally  ;  7037.  Tapli : 
crimson  ;  creeper  on  trees  ;  6797.  Distrib.  Tenasserim, 
Malay  Peninsula,  Java. 

182.  Dischidia  lancifolia,  sp.  nov. 

Stems  long,  slender,  twining,  glabrous.  Leaves  narrow 
lanceolate,  sub-acute  or  blunt,  narrowed  to  tip,  fleshy  ; 
nerves  3  pairs  inarching,  nearly  invisible,  3  in.  long,  -6  in. 
wide  ;  petiole  -05  in.  Flowers  very  small  in  axillary  fas- 
cicles with  ovate  bracts.  Pedicels  very  short.  Sepals  ovate 
blunt.  Corolla  whitish  yellow,  -05  in.  long  ;  tube  globose, 
abruptly  narrowed  at  top  ;  lobes  lanceolate  with  long 
straight,  erect  hairs  at  base.  Anther  column  short,  broad, 
blunt.  Corona  scales  anchor-shai>ed.  PoUinia  linear- 
oblong,  disc  very  small,  elliptic,  dark  red.  Capsule  e'ongate, 
narrow  lanceolate,  1-5  in.  long,  valves  -1  in.  wide.  Seed 
linear-oblong,  plume-hairs  •  5  in  long. 

Mamoh  :  Petals  white,  calyx  yellow  ;  climber  ;  674. 
Tapli  :  Whitish  yellow  ;  climber  ;  6805. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  103 

Allied  to  D.  Scortechinii,  Gainble,  and  resembling  it  in 
its  leaves  but  tlowers  in  a  very  short  fascicle  of  bracts,  sessile 
in  the  axils  and  hardly  half  the  size. 


LOGANIACEAE. 

183.  Fagraea  racemosa.  Jack. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  green  ;  tree  ;  6998.  Distrib.  Malay 
Peninsula. 

GENTIANACEAE. 

184.  Limnanthemum  cristatum,  Griseb. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Flowers  white  ;  creeping  ground  plant ; 
6577. 

BORAGINEAE. 

185.  Cordia  subcordata.  Lam. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  scarlet  orange  ;  tree  ;  6559. 
Distrib.  Sea  shores,  Andamans,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands 
to  Polynesia. 

186.  Coldenia  procumbens,  L. 

Tapli  :  White ;  leaves  grey  green.  Distrib.  Sandy 
places.     All  tropics. 

187.  Tournefortia  argentoa,  Linn.  fill. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  White,  throat  green,  stamens  yellow  ; 
6546.  Distrib.  Mauritius,  Ceylon,  Nicobars,  Butang  Ids., 
Malay  isles  to  Australia. 

188.  Rhabdia  lycioides,  Mart. 

Tasan  :  Deep  pink  ;  growing  in  water  ;  6880  :  Purplish- 
red  ;  fruit  dull  crimson  ;  in  river  ;  6962.  Distrib.  India, 
Siam,  Borneo,  not  in  Malay  Peninsula. 


CONVOLVULACEAE. 

189.  ?  Argyreia  splendens,  Sweet. 

Koh  Jam  Yai  :  Climber  ;  fruit  crimson  ;  6626.  Only 
a  spray  of  fruits,  so  I  am  not  sure  of  the  species. 

190.  Lettsomia  peguensis,  Clarke. 

Tasan  :  Pink  to  white ;  creeper ;  6991  and  7020. 
Distrib.  Burma  South  to  Malay  Peninsula. 

191.  Ipomoea  grandiflora,  Lam. 

Tasan  :  Crimson  ;  6949.  Distrib.  Indo-Malaya.  The 
colour  is  usually  given  as  white. 

192.  Ipomoea  denticulata,  Choisy. 

Mamoh  :  Crimson  ;  climber  ;  6723.  Distrib.  Mergui, 
Ceylon,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands  to  Polynesia,  Mas- 
carenes. 


104  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

193.    Merremia  umbellata,  Hallier. 

Tasan  :  Apricot  yeHow ;  6848.     Distrib.  Old  World 
Tropics. 


SOLANACEAE. 

194.  Solanum  torvum,  Sw. 

Tasan  :  Bush,  7  to  8  ft.  ;  white.     Distrib.    Tropics. 

SCROPHULARINEAE. 

195.  Bonnaya  reptans,  Spreng. 

Tasan  :  Dark  to  light  violet-blue  ;  reverse  of  leaves  dull 
crimson  ;  6965.     Distrib.  Indo-Malaya. 

196.  Scoparia  dulcis,  L. 

Tasan  :  Greenish  white  ;  7019.  Distrib.  Introduced 
from  South  America  ;  now  a  weed  all  oyer  most  of  the 
tropics  except  Polynesia,  a  large  part  of  India  and  Ceylon. 

LENTIBULARIACEAE. 

197.  Utricularia  exoleta,  Br. 

Klong  Bagatae :  Pale  yellow  ;  2-4  in.  high ;  6576. 
Distrib.  Malaya,  Australia. 


GESNERACEAE. 

198.  Cyrtandra  bicolor,  Jack,  var.  septentrionalis,  var.  nov. 
Whole  plant  except  inflorescence  sub-glabrous  ;  nerves 

sparsely  hairy  ;  petiole  8  in.  long.    Leaves  thinner  in  texture. 
Tasan  :  Flower  pale  yellow  ;  6978. 

The  Cyrtandras  abundant  in  Eastern  Malaya,  disappear 
towards  the  North  of  the  Peninsula;  the  only  one  known 
North  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  is  a  form  of  C.  pilosa,  Bl., 
which  occurs  in  Tenasserim.  This  plant  appears  to  be  a 
variety  of  the  common  Southern  C.  bicolor.  Jack  (C 
pendula,  Bl.) ,  its  furthest  Northern  habitat. 

199.  Aesehynanthus  marmorata,  T.  Moore. 

Mamoh  :  Leaves  above  pale  and  dark  green  ;  below 
pale  green  and  crimson  ;  midrib  crimson  ;  6722.  Tapli ; 
6740. 

BIGNONIACEAE. 

200.  Dolichandrone  spathacea,  L. 

Nam  Chut  :  Flowers  white  ;  fruit  yellowish  ;  6695. 
Distrib.  Burma,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

201.  Heterophragma  adenophyllum,  Seem. 

Taph  :  Large  tree  ;  flowers  white.  Distrib.  Assam,  E. 
Bengal  to  Tenasserim  and  Kedah. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  105 

202.  Radermachera  amoena,  Seem. 

Tapli :  Buds  pink ;  flower  opened,  white ;  6773.  Distrib. 
Moulmein,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

203.  Pajanelia  multijuga,  Kurz. 

Tapli :  Fruit  green  ;  tree,  40  ft. ;  6780.  Distrib.  India, 
Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

ACANTHACEAE.  { 

204.  Thunbergia  laurifolia,  Lindl. 

Tasan  :  Lilac  blue,  throat  yellowish  striped  with  brown  ; 
6869.  Nam  Chut :  Pale  violet ;  creeper.  Distrib.  Arracan 
to  Malay  Peninsula. 

205.  Ebermaiera  merguensis,  Anders. 

Tasan  :  White,  deep  crimson  patch  on  one  petal ; 
6984  ;  Pinkish  white,  crimson  patch  on  lip  ;  6974.  Distrib. 
Mergui,  Malay  Peninsula. 

206.  Ebermaiera  lasiobotrys,  Nees. 

Tapli :  crimson  ;  6802.  Tasan  :  Purplish  crimson,  tips 
of  flower  petals  white  and  white  spot  on  end  of  upper  petal ; 
6967  :  Dull  crimson,  edge  of  lip  white  ;  6953.  Distrib. 
Lower  Burma,  Malay  Peninsula. 

207.  Ebermaiera  angustifolia,  Anders. 

Tasan  :  White,  tipped  pink  ;  1  foot ;  6920.  Distrib. 
Burma,  Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula.  The  one  specimen 
has  an  elongate  stem  with  pairs  of  axillary  branchlets  bear- 
ing spikes  which  is  not  usual. 

208.  Ebermaiera  viscida,  sp.  nov. 

Stems  decumbent,  6  to  12  in.  rather  stout,  viscid,  tomen- 
tose.  Leaves  elliptic  blunt,  base  narrowed,  viscid  pubescent 
on  both  sides  but  chiefly  on  the  back  ;  nerves  6  pairs  elevate 
beneath,  3  to  5  in.  long,  1  in.  wide  in  rather  distant  pairs. 
Petioles  1  in.  long  ;  bracts  broad,  spathulate,  green,  glabrous 
caducous  •  2  in.  long.  Calyx-lobes  lanceolate-linear  acumi- 
nate, narow  viscid,  •  2  in.  long.  Corolla  •  5  in.  long,  base  of 
tube  narrow  then  abruptly  dilate,  cylindric,  lobes  small, 
white  tipped  with  crimson.  Fruit  oblong  blunt  at  both 
ends,  grooved  longitudinally,  shorter  than  the  sepals. 

Tasan  :  White  tipped  with  crimson  ;  6911. 

Allied  to  E.  Griffithiana  but  the  stem  longer,  leaves  and 
stem  viscid,  hairy  and  flowers  with  purple  petals.  It  evi- 
dently grows  in  sandy  spots  as  much  sand  adheres  to  it. 

209.  Nelsonia  campestris,  Br. 

Tapli:  Violet;  6752  and  6746.  Tasan:  Pale  blue; 
6830. 

210.  Strobilanthes  lancifolius,  Anders  var.  laxior. 

Sepals  and  bracts  narrower  more  acute  and  spike  more 
lar  ;  the  tuft  of  flowers  being  •  25  to  •  5  in.  apart. 

Tasan  :  Purple,  base  of  lip  yellow ;  6859.  Distrib, 
Tenasserim. 


106  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums,  [Vol.  X, 

211.  Strobilanthes  subcapitatus,  Clarke. 

Tasan  :  Violet,  whitish  at  base  ;  7036.  DistrW.  Tenas- 
serim. 

I  am  not  certain  of  this,  the  type  specimens  are  larger 
and  older  and  have  no  corollas  and  this  specimen  is  small 
and  younger. 

(Strobilanthes  violacea,  Ridl.  Jom*n.  Straits  Branch 
Royal  Asiat.  Soc,  No.  57,  p.  80,  1911.  This  name  is  antici- 
pated by  Beddome  :  I  alter  it  to  Strobilanthes  phoenicea, 
Ridl.). 

212.  Strobilanthes  violascens,  sp.  nov. 

Tall  plant.  Stem  woody,  young  parts  densely  brown 
hairy.  Leaves  opposite  herbaceous,  glabrous  with  many 
raphides-bundles  on  upper  surface,  elliptic-lanceolate,  sub- 
acute, base  cuneate,  edge  serrulate  ;  nerves  12  pairs,  slender, 
elevate  beneath,  9  in.  long,  4  in.  wide  ;  petiole  3  in.  long, 
hairy.  Racemes  axillary,  2*5  in.  long  (or  more  for  they 
are  young  in  specimen) .  Bracts  narrow  lanceolate,  cuspi- 
date '25  in.  long.  Sepals  linear  acuminate,  hairy  free  to 
base,  "25  in.  long,  narrow.  Corolla  1*5  in.  long,  base  -25 
in.  long,  narrow,  then  campanulate,  lobes  rather  short, 
rounded,  pale  violet  and  yellowish,  glabrous.  Stamens  4, 
quite  glabrous,  anthers  oblong. 

Tasan  :  Pale  violet  and  yellowish  ;  6833. 

Allied  to  S.  collinus  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  but  the 
stamens  are  quite  glabrous.  The  stem  above  is  knotted, 
swollen  just  above  the  nodes. 

213.  Acanthus  ilicifollus,  L. 

Nam  Chut :  Blue,  petals  whitish  at  base  ;  6675.  Distrib. 
India,  Malay  Peninsula,  chiefly  in  the  North,  Malay  Islands 
and  Australia. 

214.  CystacantHus  pulcherrimus,  Clarke. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Pale  pinkish-white,  spotted  crimson 
inside,  spotted  brown  on  lowe^:  side  of  throat ;  2  to  4  ft. 
high  ;  6563.  Nam  Chut :  Pale  lilac,  spotted  deep  crimson  ; 
2  to  3  ft. ;  6689. 

215.  Gymnostachyum  trilobum,  sp.  nov. 

Stems  slender,  decumbent,  creeping,  6  in.  or  more 
then  ascending  3  in.,  internodes  long.  Leaves  opposite  her- 
baceous, ovate-lanceolate  or  sub-elliptic,  blunt,  paler 
beneath,  glabrous  ;  nerves  4  to  5  pairs,  2  to  3  in.  long,  1  •  5 
in.  wide ;  petiole  1  in.  long.  Flowers  in  pairs  on  a  spike 
9  in.  long  or  more.  Bracts  lanceolate  acuminate,  1  in. 
Sepals  free  nearly  to  base,  linear  acuminate  longer.  Corolla 
tube  •  1  in.  long,  upper  lobe  lanceolate,  erect  nearly  as  long, 
lower  lip  deeply  3  lobed,  lobes  linear  obtuse,  midlobe  elUp- 
tic,  broader,  white  or  lilac  white,  lower  hp  spotted  crimson 
at  base.  Stamens  2,  linear-oblong,  cells  parallel,  purple, 
shortly  acuminate  at  base,  filaments  puberulous. 

TapU  :  Lilac  white,  Hp  spotted  crimson  near  base  ;  6726. 
Tasan  :  White,  spotted  purple  ;  6857. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  107 

Allied  to  G.  diversifolium  King,  but  the  flowers  much 
smaller  than  in  most  of  this  set  and  the  lower  Up  unusually 
deeply  tri-lobed. 

216.  Lepidagathis  hyalina,  Nees. 

Tasan  :  White,  hood  largely  brown  ;  6862  :  Whitish, 
hood  spotted  brown,  lip  crimson  ;  6861.  Distrib.  India,  S. 
China,  Malay  Peninsula. 

217.  Lepidagathis  chlorostachya,  Nees. 

Tasan  :  Whitish  ;  6889  :  Yellowish  white,  hood  pale 
brown  ;  2  ft.  ;  6917.     Distrib.  Mergui,  Penang. 

218.  Lepidagathis  parviflora,  Bl. 

Nam  Chut :  White,  hp  spotted  crimson.  Distrib.  Siam, 
Java. 

The  specimen  has  more  lanceolate  and  hairy  leaves 
than  in  type. 

219.  Pseuderanthemum  malaccense,  Lindau. 

Tasan  :  Lilac  ;  2  to  4  ft. ;  6837.  Distrib.  Malay  Penin- 
sula. 

220.  Pseuderanthemum  crenulatum,  Nees. 

Tasan  :  Petals  pink,  white  at  centre  ;  2  ft.  ;  6921,  (the 
big  form) .  Klong  Bagatae  :  Pale  violet ;  2  to  4  ft.  ;  6581. 
Koh  Pipidon  :  Lilac  to  mauve  ;  1  to  1-5  ft.  high  ;  6541,  (tlie 
form  with  broad  elhptic  leaves,  7  in.  long,  3-5  in.  wide, 
characteristic  of  this  region  to  Perhs) .  Tasan  :  white ; 
6918,  (the  ordinary  Malay  Peninsula  form).  Distrib. 
Burma,  Cambodia  to  Malay  Peninsula. 

221.  Pseuderanthemum  angustifolium,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  erect,  woody,  12  in.  tall,  little  branched.  Leaves 
few  at  the  base  of  the  racemes,  linear  lanceolate-acuminate, 
blunt  coriaceous  ;  nerves  5  pairs,  2*75  in.  long,  -3  in.  wide  ; 
petiole  very  short.  Racemes  slender  6  to  13  in.  long,  base 
nude.  Inflorescence  3  in.  long,  puberulous.  Flowers 
sohtary  -25  in.  apart,  white.  Bracts  lanceolate  -1  in. 
Sepals  very  narrow,  hnear-acuminate,  •  12  in.  long.  Corolla- 
tube  slender,  cylindric  •  75  in.  long,  pubescent ;  lobes  oblong, 
tip  broad  round  '25  in.  long.  Stamens,  tips  only  exsert. 
Style  very  slender,  filiform  *75  in.  long,  pubescent. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  white  ;  6557.  Quite  unlike  any- 
thing I  know  in  its  few  coriaceous  narrow  leaves  and  remote 
pubescent  flowers. 

222.  Justicia  purpurascens,  sp.  nov. 

Creeping  and  ascending  herb.  Stems  ascending  6  to  7 
in.,  hairy  tomentose.  Leaves  ovate  or  oblong-ovate,  acumi- 
nate, base  round,  purple  beneath  ;  nerves  6  pairs  prominent 
beneath,  hairy  on  both  sides  ;  midrib  and  nerves  beneath 
felted,  4  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  petiole  2  in.  long,  felted  tomen- 
tose, spike  terminal,  '5  to  -25  in.  long  ;  peduncle  '75  in. 
Bracts  rhomboid  ovate  narrowed  at  both  ends,  hairy  espe- 
cially on  edges,  •  25  in.  long  and  a  little  narrower.  Flower 
sessile.     Sepals  very  narrow  hnear  filiform.     Corolla  tube 


108  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

cylindric,  '25  in.  long,  dilate  near  mouth  and  at  base, 
glabrous  outside,  lobes  short,  lower  lip  pubescent  above 
shortly  lobed.  Anthers  hairy  curved,  purple  with  a  white 
spur.  Capsule  fusiform,  shorter  than  the  bracts,  acute 
hairy. 

Tasan  :  Yellowish-green,  spotted  crimson  ;  6919  :  Bracts 
pale  green  tipped  with  red,  reverse  of  leaves  crimson  ;  6983. 

A  very  distinct  species  in  its  hairiness  and  the  rhomboid 
bracts  and  small  flower. 

223.  Justicia  subcoriacea,  sp.  nov. 

Shrublet  2  to  2*5  ft.  tall ;  branches  woody  with  pale 
bark  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  eUiptic  narrowed  and  obUque 
at  the  base,  tip  blunt,  rounded  or  shortly  blunt  acuminate, 
edge  crenulate,  coriaceous  hght  green  when  dry  ;  nerves  4 
pau*s,  sunk  above,  prominent  beneath,  4  to  4-5  in.  long, 
2  to  3  in.  wide ;  petiole  •  5  in.  long.  Spike  terminal,  3  in. 
long,  peduncle  -5  in.  Bracts  green,  coriaceous,  ovate  acute, 
base  broad,  '4  in.  long,  -2  in.  wide  keeled  and  nerved. 
Calyx-lobes  short,  narrowly  acuminate  from  a  broader  base. 
Corolla  '75  in.  long,  tube  straight  cylindric,  lobes  as  long, 
upper  lobe  lanceolate  narrow,  lower  lobe  obovate,  wider, 
strongly  nerved.  Filament  half  as  long  as  upper  lobe ; 
anther-cells  oblong,  the  lower  one  with  a  short  white  conical 
acute  spur.  Capsule  1  in.  long,  dilated  upwards,  acute. 
Seeds  orbicular,  thickly  white-pustular. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  White,  striped  deep  crimson ;  2  to  2*5 
ft.  high ;  6542.  Very  distinct  in  its  shrubby  habit  and 
glabrous  coriaceous  leaves. 

224.  Justicia  Gendarusa,  L. 

Mamoh  :  PurpUsh  to  pinkish  white ;  1-2  ft. ;  6702. 
Distrib.  Tropical  Asia. 

225.  Justicia  valida,  Ridl. 

Tasan  :  Greenish-white ;  1  to  2  ft. ;  6899.  Distrib, 
Kedah. 

The  specimens  have  more  slender  racemes  and  are 
nearly  glabrous,  but  I  do  not  think  it  can  be  separated. 

226.  Justicia  quadrifaria,  Nees. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  one  ft. ;  6840  :  Pale  greenish  yellow  ; 
6  ft. ;  6826.  TapU  :  Upper  petal  white  spotted  crimson ; 
lip  green  ;  6753.    Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

The  form  is  quite  like  that  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  which 
Clarke  identified  as  Neesiana  but  which  I  think  is  not  typi- 
cal Neesiana. 

227.  Justicia  (  §  Henicophylla)  viridiflora,  sp.  nov. 
Shrubby,  4  to  5  ft.  tall,  young  parts  i  abescent.     Leaves 

in  very  unequal  pairs,  larger  one  lanceolate-acuminate,  base 
blunt  slightly  obUque  ;  nerves  5  pairs  ascending,  6  in.  long, 

2  in.  wide  or  less  ;  petiole  •  1  in.,  small  leaf  ovate  •  5  in,  long, 
sub-sessile,  •  3  nerved.    Cymes  axillary  hairy,  •  5  in.  long  of 

3  to  4  branches.    Bracts  short,  linear  acuminate  hairy. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  109 

Sepals  lanceolate  acuminate  narrow  hairy  '12  in.  CoroUa 
tube  short  and  broad,  little  longer  than  the  sepals  ;  upper 
lobe  broad  blunt  short,  lower  broader,  rounded  shortly 
lobed,  reticulate  veined  within  hairy ;  lower  lip  green, 
spotted  crimson.  Stamens  2,  anther-cells  unequal  narrow 
elliptic,  the  lower  one  with  rather  a  long  white  conic  process. 
Ovary  narrowed  cylindric,  elMpsoid  with  style  glabrous. 
Capsule  •  6  in.  long,  base  narrow,  seed  bearing  portion  dilate 
indented  between  the  seeds,  tip  acute,  all  hairy  Seeds 
orbicular  pustulate. 

228.  Leda  roseo-punctata,  sp.  nov. 

Straggling  glabrous  herb  about  2  ft.  tall.  Leaves  ovate 
to  eUiptic  lanceolate  sub-coriaceous  ;  nerves  5  pairs,  base 
and  tips  narrowed,  shortly  acuminate,  4  in.  long,  1-5  in. 
wide  ;  petiole  •  25  in.  long.  Panicle  lax  and  spreading  of 
3  or  more  slender  glandular  pubescent  branches  about  4  in. 
long,  peduncle  above  the  uppermost  pair  of  leaves  5  in. 
long,  uppermost  pair  of  leaves  orbicular  acute,  -5  in.  long. 
Flowers  in  pairs,  sub-sessile.  Bracts  small,  ovate  lanceo- 
late. Sepals  lanceolate-acuminate,  •!  in.  long.  Corolla  '3 
in.  long,  glabrous  tube  sub-cylindric,  limb  slightly  dilate, 
lower  tip  little  longer,  broader  than  upper,  strongly  reticu- 
late veined  3  lobed,  midlobe  broadest,  white  spotted  crimson. 
Stamens  2,  purple,  cells  of  anther  at  unequal  heights  not 
tailed 

Tasan  :  White  spotted  crimson  ;  6910.  Allied  to  L. 
virgata  {Dianthera  virgata,  Benth.)  but  differing  in  foliage 
as  well  as  glandular  pubescence  from  any  other  of  the 
Indian  species.  The  Indian  species  of  Dianthera  have  been 
separated  from  the  American  ones  under  the  name  of  Leda. 

ANTHELIACANTHUS,  gen.  nov. 

Shrubby  herb.  Leaves  broad,  lanceolate  opposite. 
Spikes  terminal,  elongate.  Flowers  very  small  in  distant 
pairs  of  fasicles  sessile.  Bracts  linear  acuminate.  Calyx 
of  5  lanceolate-acuminate  sepals  connate  at  base.  Corolla- 
tube  hardly  longer,  base  dilate  above  cylindric  lobes  sub- 
equal,  very  short,  round.  Stamens  2,  anther-cells  one 
slightly  above  the  other  not  tailed.  Ovary  cylindric  con- 
taining 2  ovules.  Style  simple,  clubbed  at  tip.  Capsule 
with  a  narrow  base  then  dilate  and  indented  between  the 
2  seeds,  tip  acute. 

229.  Antheliacanthus  micranthus,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  as  thick  as  a  crow  quill,  sub-glabrous.  Leaves 
herbaceous  ovate  lanceolate  acuminate,  base  long  narrowed, 
nerves  10  pairs,  slender,  ascending,  elevate  beneath  all 
glabrous,  6  in.  long,  3  in.  wide,  petiole  1  in.  long.  Spikes 
2,  pubescent,  7  in.  long.  Flower  fascicles  -5  in.  apart. 
Bracts  linear-acuminate,  '12  in.  long.  Sepals  lanceolate, 
connate  at  base  into  a  short  cup,  hairy,  acute.  CoroUa 
hardly  longer,  •  1  in.  long,  lilac,  tube  cylindric,  slightly  dilate 
at  base  then  narrowed,  lobes  5,  round,  pubescent  all  equal, 
very  short.     Stamens  2.     Anther-cells  pale,  slightly  un- 


110  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

equally  placed,  glabrous.  Pistil  cylindric,  top  hairy  2 
ovuled.  Style  simple,  clubbed,  purple.  Capsule  '4  in. 
long,  hairy. 

Koh  Gah  :  Flowers  lilac  ;  6594. 

230.  Sphinctacanthus  tabacifolius  sp.  nov. 

Shi'ubby,  4  ft.  tall.  Leaves  large  herbaceous,  glabrous 
elliptic  acuminate  cuspidate,  base  shortly  narrowed  ;  nerves 
6  pairs,  transverse  nervules  few,  reticulations  large,  8*5  in. 
long,  4  in.  wide  ;  petiole  2  in.  long.  Panicle  terminal,  dense, 
hairy,  5  in.  long  ;  branches  short  ascending.  Bracts  lan- 
ceolate-Unear  acuminate  hairy,  -1  in.  long.  Calyx-lobes 
lanceolate  hairy  deeply  cut  as  long.  Corolla  -25  in.  long, 
hairy,  tube  stout  as  long  as  limb,  slightly  narrowed  below 
the  limb,  pubescent ;  upper  lobe  narrow,  bifid  at  lip,  lower 
three-lobed  with  long  narrow  blunt  lobes,  palate  veined 
hairy.  Stamens  2,  anther-cells  ellipsoid,  nearly  completely 
parallel,  very  shortly  pointed  at  base,  not  tailed  ;  filaments 
hairy  at  base.  Pistil  as  long  as  sepals.  Style  long,  slender, 
all  hairy. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  4  f  t. :  6973. 

231.  Rungia  parviflora  var.  pectinata. 

TapU  :  Blue,  spotted  darker  blue  ;  6732.  Tasan  :  Pale 
blue,  lip  blotched  darker  blue  ;  6863.    Distrih.  Indo-Malaya. 

232.  Peristrophe  acuminata  var.  fragilis. 

Tasan  :  Pale  violet,  upper  petal  with  a  patch  of  white 
spotted  deep  crimson  ;  6856.  Taph  :  Pale  hlac  ;  6734. 
Distrih.  Mergui,  Rangoon,  Malay  Peninsula.  In  these  speci- 
mens the  flower  is  distinctly  larger  than  in  the  typical  form. 

VERBENACEAE. 

233.  Callicarpa  arborea,  Roxb. 

Koh  Gah  :  Flower  pale  violet  or  deep  Ulac ;  6592. 
Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula. 

234.  Callicarpa  villosissima,  sp.  nov. 

Tree  ;  branches  thickly  yellow  woolly  tomentose  with 
long  plumed  hairs.  Young  leaves  densely  tomentose  ;  adult 
leaves  elliptic-acuminate,  acute,  base  cuneate,  entire  above 
except  scurfy  midrib  and  side  nerves,  glabrous  beneath 
densely  tomentose  with  stellate  and  plumed  hau's  ;  midrib 
densely  covered  with  plumed  hairs  as  are  13  pairs  of  nerves 
10  in.  long,  4.5  in.  wide  ;  petiole  stout,  1  •  5  in.  long  tomen- 
tose. Panicles  3  in.  long  and  as  wide,  widely  spreading 
densely  tomentose.  Flowers  sessile  or  sub-sessile.  Calyx 
short  almost  cup-shaped,  very  obscurely  toothed.  Corolla 
glabrous  tube  twice  as  long  ;  lobes  oblong  rounded. 
Stamens  4.  Tasan  :  Tree  ;  deep  lilac  ;  6851.  This  might 
be  considered  a  variety  of  C.  arborea  but  the  indumentum 
is  totally  different  and  the  flowers  have  a  shorter  calyx. 
The  panicles  are  wider  than  in  most  forms  The  distinctly 
plumed  hairs  are  very  curious. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants,  111 

235.  Premna  integrifolia,  l^. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  white  ;  tree.  Distrib.  Ceylon, 
Malay  Peninsula. 

236.  Vitex  pubescens,  Vahl. 

Koh  Gah  :  White  to  pale  violet ;  tree.  Distrib.  India, 
Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

237.  Clerodendron  infortunatum,  Gaertn. 

Tapli  :  White  ;  3-4  ft.  ;  6784  ;  Nam  Chut  :  White,  base 
of  petal  red  ;  calyx  greenish  red  ;  6673. 

238.  Clerodendron  neriifolium,  Wallich  Cat.  1789. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  duU  greenish  yellow  ;  Stamens 
tipped  red  ;  woody  climber  ;  6555.  This  is  just  the  plant 
collected  by  Wallich  on  the  shores  of  Tenasserim.  It  is 
given  in  the  Flora  of  British  India  as  occurring  from  Chitta- 
gong  to  Malacca.  I  have  not  seen  anything  like  it  in  the 
Malay  Peninsula,  the  species  confused  with  it  by  Bentham 
and  others  being  the  fleshy-leaved  white  flowered  bush  C. 
inerme  Gaertn.,  so  abundant  on  our  shores.  The  leaves 
are  lanceolate  and  stiff  not  obovate  and  fleshy.  The  coroUa- 
tube  is  an  inch  long,  in  Wallich's  specimen,  -75  in.  A 
drawing  in  Roxburgh's  collection  has  white  flowers  and 
white  stamens.     Distrib.  Tenasserim. 

239.  Congea  tomentosa,  Roxb. 

Mamoh  on  the  Pakchan,  Renong ;  6703.  Distrib. 
Chittagong,  Burma,  Annam. 

240.  Sphenodesma  microstylis,  Clarke. 

Nam  Chut:  Pale  green;  climber;  6678.  Distrib. 
Tavoy,  Tenasserim  to  Perlis, 

241.  Sphenodesma  pentandra,  Jack. 

Mamoh  :  Green  ;  chmber  ;  6707.  Tasan  :  Climber  ; 
bracts  green  ;  7038.  Distrib.  Assam,  South  to  Malay  Penin- 
sula. 

LABIATAE. 

242.  Dysophylla  auricularia,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  Pinkish  white  ;  6864.    Distrib.  Indo-Malaya. 

APETALAE. 

ARISTOLOCHIACEAE. 

243.  ?  Thottea  tricornis,  Maing.  &  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  :  Pinkish  ;  2  ft.  ;  6996.  The  flower  has  unfor- 
tunately perished  but  the  foliage  resembles  this  species. 
It  is  the  first  species  of  the  genus  collected  in  this  region. 

PIPERACEAE. 

244.  Piper  pupuloides,  Roxb.  Fl.  Ind.  I,  159. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  yellowish  buff  ;  6907.  This  closely  re- 
sembles a  plant  collected  by  Heifer  in  Tenasserim  (No. 
4411)  and  labelled  var.  angiisti folium  at  Kew.    The  leaves 


112  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

are  rather  narrower  than  in  typical  specimens  and  ovate- 
Janceolate  acuminate.    Distrih.  Himalayas  to  Tenasserim. 

245.  Piper  (S.  Chavica)  Eraensis,  sp.  nov. 

Climber.  Stem  •  1  in.  through,  slightly  woody  ;  young 
parts  pubescent.  Leaves  herbaceous  elliptic-oblong,  base 
broad  unaequilateral ;  tips  abruptly  acuminate,  point  1  in. 
long  ;  nerves  pinnate,  5-6  pairs,  ascending,  curved  ;  nervules 
slender  distant ;  nerves  and  midrib  slightly  pubescent 
beneath,  8  in.  long,  4  in.  wide,  petiole  •!  to  -2  in.  long. 
Spikes  very  slender,  10  in.  long.  Bracts  orbicular  peltate, 
stalk  central.  Tasan :  Green  climber ;  7045.  Distrih. 
Isthmus  of  Kra.  This  somewhat  resembles  but  is  distinct 
in  its  numerous  nerves. 

246.  Piper  (S.  Cubeba)  polycarpa,  sp.  nov. 

Glabrous ;  stem  woody.  Leaves  sub-coriaceous,  oblong- 
lanceolate  acuminate,  base  narrowed  slightly  and  unequally 
rounded  at  extreme  base  ;  nerves  pinnate,  10  pairs,  slender 
distant  inarching  at  tips,  transverse  nervules  few  and  very 
inconspicuous,  6*5  in.  long,  2  in.  wide  ;  petiole  -25  in.  Male 
spikes  not  known.  Fruiting  spikes  4*5  in.  long,  peduncle 
•5  to  '75  in.  long.  Fruit  orange  quite  globose  when  ripe, 
•  12  in.  through  on  sUghtly  longer  slender  stalks. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  orange  ;  6888.  I  know  nothing  really  like 
this  Cubeb,  the  stiffness  of  the  leaves  suggests  an  affinity 
with  P.  ribesioideSt  but  the  shape  of  them  and  the  smaller 
fruit  is  very  different. 

LAURINEAE. 

247.  Litsea  panamonja.  Ham. 

Tasan  :  Yellow  (pale  apricot)  ;  tree  ;  7018.  "  Medang  '* 
(Malay).    Distrih.  Tenasserim  and  Malay  Peninsula. 

248.  Litsea  aff.  albicans,  Kurz. 

Glabrous  tree ;  twigs  slender.  Leaves  alternate,  thin, 
coriaceous  oblong  or  ovate-oblong,  base  round  or  narrowed, 
tip  acute,  drying  pale  green  beneath  glaucescent,  nerves  6 
to  7  pairs,  slender  elevate  beneath,  nervules  irregular  and 
few,  reticulations  small,  all  rather  faint  and  obscure. 
Flowers  not  seen.  Fruit  1  to  3  together  on  a  short  -25  in. 
axillary  raceme.  Cupule  basin- shaped,  '25  in.  deep  and  '3 
in.  wide,  thin  on  a  short  thick  stalk.  Drupe  ellipsoid, 
sUghtly  narrowed  to  the  tip,  -6  in.  long,  '25  in.  through. 

Tasan  :  Green  ;  tree,  moderate  size  ;  7052.  "  Medang." 
I  cannot  match  this  but  have  not  seen  flowers. 

249.  Phoebe  Tavoyana,  Hook.  fil. 

Tapli :  Pale  yellowish  green  ;  15  ft.  ;  6796.  Distrih, 
Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

250.  Cinnamomum  nitidum,  Bl.  Hook.  fil.  F.B.L  130. 

Mamoh  :  Tree ;  6712.  I  take  this  to  be  the  plant 
intended  by  Hooker,  but  the  peduncle  and  branches  are 
more  distinctly  hairy.  It  belongs  to  the  very  difficult  set  of 
C.  iners  of  which  all  the  species  are  very  closely  aUied. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  113 

MYRISTICACEAE. 

251.  Myristica  longifolia.  Wall.  Cat.  6801. 

Mamoh  on  the  Pakchan  river,  Renong  :  Brov^n  ;  tree  ; 
6699  ;  Tasan  :  Red  ;  tree  ;  6936.  Distrib.  India  from  Sikkim 
to  Tenasserim. 

PROTEACEAE. 

252.  Helicia  terminalis,  Kurz. 

Tapli  :  Yellowish  ;  large  tree  ;  6815      Distrib.  Ava. 

253.  Helicia  excelsa,  Bl. 

Mamoh  :  Large  tree  ;  Greenish-brov/n  ;  style  black  ; 
6719.  Distrib.  Khasiya,  Tenasserim,  Cambodia,  Malay 
Peninsula. 

HERNANDIACEAE. 

254.  Illigera  trifoliata,  Dunn. 

Nam  Chut  :  Climber  ;  fruit  green,  tipped  and  streaked 
red  ;  6679.     Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula. 

255.  Hernandia  peltata,  Meissn. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  white  ;  stamens  yellow  ;  sepals 
and  bracts  pale  dull  yellowish  green  ;  65''»8.  Distrib.  Sea- 
shores, Africa,  Madagascar,  Ceylon,  Andamans,  Malay 
Peninsula  and  Islands,  Polynesia. 

LORANTHACEAE.  : 

256.  Loranthus  pentandrus,  L. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  Flowers  dull  greenish  yellow  ;  stamens 
tipped  red  ;  woody  climber  ;  6555.  Distrib.  Indin,  Malay 
Peninsula  to  Borneo,  Sumatra  and  Java. 

257.  Loranthus  vulpinus,  sp.  nov. 

Branches  black ;  young  parts  red,  scurfy.  Leaves 
opposite,  stiffly  coriaceous  when  young  densely  rcd-tomen- 
tose.  Adult  glabrous  or  with  midrib  pubescent  lanceolate- 
acuminate,  shortly  base  rounded  ;  midrib  prominent  on 
both  sides  ;  nerves  invisible  or  very  faint,  3  pairs,  2*5  in. 
long,  1  in.  wide  ;  petiole  -15  in.  Flowers  axillary,  raceme, 
•5  in.  long,  densely  orange-tomentose.  Bracts  lanceolate- 
acuminate  -4  in.  long.  Calyx  tube  short  with  very  obscure 
teeth.  Corolla  1  in.  long  curved,  narrowed  a  little  above 
the  dilate  base  and  then  dilated,  lobes  4  or  5,  linear,  all  red- 
tomentose  and  hairy.  Stamens  4-5  ;  anthers  linear,  -3  in. 
long.  Style  slender,  all  glabrous.  Koh  Jam  Yai  off  the 
coast  of  Takuapa  :  6623.  Alhed  to  L.  casuarinae,  Ridl.  but 
the  leaves  smaller  and  much  less  hairy,  and  flowers  much 
smaller. 

258.  Elytranthe  globosa,  Don. 

Tapli  :  Yellowish  green  blotched  with  red  ,  6808. 
Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 

7 


114  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

259.  Elytranthe  albida,  Bl. 

Mamoh  :  White,  tips  leaden  ;  stamens  brown  ;  6709. 
Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 

260.  Viscum  monoicum,  Roxb. 

Tapli  :  Fruit  orange  ;  bi:sh  ;  6779.  Distrib.  India, 
Ceylon,  Burma  to  Trang,  Peninsular  Siam. 

EUPHOREIACEAE. 

261.  Bridelia  stipularis,  Bl 

Tasan  :  Climber  ;  fruit  green  to  black  ;  6847  Distrib. 
India,  Malaya,  Africa. 

262.  Phyllanthus  emblica,  L. 

Nam  Chut  :  Flowers  green  ;  tree ;  6681.  Distrib. 
India. 

263.  Phyllanthus  Klossii,  sp.  nov. 

P.  baeobotrijoides.  Hook,  fil.,  F.B.I.,  V.  p.  291  (in  part). 

Branches  strongl^^  4-anglcd.  Leaves  thinly  coriaceous, 
lanceolate  acuminate,  base  rounded  ;  midrib  on  both  sides 
scurfy,  hairy  ;  nerves  prominent  beneath  inarching  5  imirs, 
5  in.  long,  1  •  5  in.  wide,  slightly  paler  beheatli  ;  petiole  under 
•05  in.  Stipules  narrow  linear-acuminate.  Racemes  supra- 
axillary  very  slender,  6  in.  long  with  distant,  very  short 
branches,  -05  in,  long,  -5  in.  apart  of  ,5  or  6  flowers,  lower 
ones  with  short  lanceolate  leaf-like  bracts,  -1  in.  long. 
Flowers  •  1  in.  wide,  shortly  pedicelled  ;  sepals  ovate,  fleshy 
with  a  low  keel  at  base  inside.  Stamens  in  a  cone,  anthers 
lanceolate,  connective  not  produced,  apex  blunt.  Disc  of 
5,  rather  irregular  oblong  glands. 

Tasan  :  Whitish  3  ft.  or  more  ;  6877.  Tenasserim 
(Heifer).  This  species  does  not  appear  to  be  the  Fame  as 
Wallich's  Nepal  P.  baeobotrijoides.  The  leaves  are  larger, 
the  racemes  much  longer  and  more  slender,  the  flowers  in 
short  racemes  on  the  main  rachis  very  far  apart.  The 
anthers  of  the  male  have  no  prolonged  connective  ;  Hooker 
referred  Heifer's  Tenasserim  plant  to  Wallich's  sp(  cies. 

264.  Phyllanthus  frondosus,  Bl. 

Tapli  :  Flowers  green  :  shrub  ;  6820.  Distrib.  Malay 
Peninsula. 

265.  Breynia  angustifolia,  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  :  Small  tree ;  greenish  yellow  ;  6961.  Distrib. 
Pegu,  Tenasserim  to  Perak. 

266.  Breynia  reclinata,  Hook.  fill. 

Koh  Gah  :  Fruit  pale  yellow  ;  bush  ;  6  ft.  Distrib. 
Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra,  Java. 

267.  Breynia  microcalyx,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  ;  glabrous.  Leaves  round  ovate,  thinly  coria- 
ceous, drying  pale  green,  base  shortly  narrowed,  rounded, 
tip  blunt ;  nerves  4  pairs,  slender,  elevate  beneath,  1-5  in. 
long,  1  in.  wide  ;  petiole  -05,  slender.  Male  flowers  minute 
turbinate  fleshy,  lobes  round  incurved.     Stamens  3,  much 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  115 

shorter  in  a  cone  blunt.  Female  flowers  a  little  larger, 
turbinate,  stigmas  sunk.  Fruit  globose,  -12  in.  long,  crim- 
son. Calyx  little  enlarged,  flat,  small  with  5  short  acute 
lobes.     Seed  smooth  semi-ovoid  with  a  short  point  at  tip. 

Koh  Pipidon  off  Ghirbi  :  Shrub  ;  fruit  crimson  ;  6547. 
It  is  very  unusual  for  a  Breynia  to  dry  green,  the  leaves  of 
most  kinds  being  fleshy.  This  one  belongs  to  the  set  in 
which  the  calyx  though  enlarged,  (for  the  female  flowers 
are  very  small)  is  not  enlarged  into  a  conspicuous  cup. 

268.  Aporosa  Planchoniana,  Baill. 

Nam  Chut  :  Flowers  yellow  ;  shrub  ;  6668.  Distrih. 
Tenasserim. 

269.  Aporosa  Prainiana,  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  :  Yellowish  ;  18  ft.  ;  6825.  Distrih.  Malay  Penin- 
sula. 

270.  Aporosa  aurea,  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  :  Pale  dull  yellow  ;  6938.  Distrih.  Chittagong, 
Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

271.  Aporosa,  sp. 

Branches  velvety.  Leaves  rather  ^hin,  coriaceous, 
elliptic  acuminate,  base  cuneatc  above  glabrous  except 
midrib  beneath  hairy  especially  on  nerves  6  in.  long,  2  in. 
wide,  petiole  -75  in.  long,  velvety.  Fruit  ovoid,  globose  -6 
in.  long  velvety.  Tasan  :  Fruit  green  ;  tree  ;  7008.  Insuffi- 
cient to  describe  as  a  new  species  but  quite  unlike  anytliing 
I  have  seen. 

272.  Baccaurea  sapida,  Muell.  Arg. 

Mamoh  on  Pakchan  River,  Renong  ;  Deep  pink  ;  tree  ; 
6700.    Distrih.  India,  Burniah. 

273.  Baccaurea  parviflora,  Muell.  Arg. 

Taph  :  Dull  carmine  ;  15  ft.  taU  ;  6771.  Distrih.  Tenas- 
serim, Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra. 

274.  Antidesma  velutinosum,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  Yellow  green  ;  Stamens  tipped  brownish  ;  10 
ft.  ;  6897  :  Greenish  ;  3  ft.  ;  6831.  Distrih.  Tenasserim, 
Malay  Peninsula.  It  is  generally  bigger  than  these,  which 
seen  to  be  dwarf  plants. 

275.  Antidesma  velutinum,  Tul. 

Tasan  :  Pale  brownish  yellow  ;  Stamens  yellow  ;  10 
ft.  ;  6941.  Nam  Chut ;  8  ft.  high  ;  6687.  Distrih.  Pegu 
and  Burma  to  Tenasserim. 

276.  Galearia  phlebocarpa,  Br. 

Tapli :  Inflorescence  greenish,  stalks  white.  Distrih. 
Malay  Peninsula. 

277.  Trigonostemon  longifolius,  Baill. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Flowers  blackish  crimson  ;  stamens 
yellowish  ;  fruit  green  to  brownish  green  ;  12  ft.  '  6565. 
Distrih.  Tenasserim  to  Singapore. 


116  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.          [Vol.  X, 

278.  Croton  Griffithii,  Hook.  fil. 

Nam  Chut  :  White  ;  stamens  greenish  ;  6674.  Distrib. 
Malay  Peninsula. 

279.  Mallotus  floribundus,  Muell.  Arg. 

Tasan  :  Whitish  ;  10  ft.  Distrib.  Tenasserim,  Cochin- 
china,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands,  Samoa. 

280.  Mallotus  sp.  aff.  M.  floribundus. 

Nam  Chut  :  Inflorescence  yellow  ;  shrub  ;  6667.  Leaves 
ovate  rather  stiff,  acute,  white  beneath.  Female  flowers. 
Ovary  covered  with  long  grey  hairy  processes  ;  style  short ; 
arms  longer.     Perhaps  only  a  variety  of  M.  floribundus. 

281.  Chaetocarpus  castanocarpus,  Thw. 

Mamoh  :  Fruit  yellowish-green ;  large  tree  ;  6716. 
Tapli :  Fruit  green  ;  large  tree  ;  6819.  Distrib.  Ceylon, 
North  of  Malay  Peninsula. 

282.  Homonoia  riparia.  Lour. 

Nam  Chut  :  Crimson  and  yellow  ;  Calyx  red ;  3  ft.  high  ; 
6677.  Tasan  :  Red,  cenU-e  brownish  green  ;  3-4  ft.  ;  River 
bank  ;  6913.     Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula,  Java. 

283.  Botryophora  Kingii,  Hook.  fil. 

TapU  :  Fruit  ( ?  flowers)  crimson  ;  large  tree  ;  6812. 
This  remarkable  plant  was  originally  collected  in  Perak  by 
Kunstler.  His  specimens  much  resemble  this  but  the  leaves 
are  much  longer.     Female  flowers  and  fruit  unknown. 

URTICACEAE. 

284.  Trema  amboinensis,  Bl. 

Tapli  :  White  ;  veins  on  reverse  of  leaf  pink  ;  6810. 
Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

285.  Ficus  gibbosa,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  orange  ;  tree,  10  ft.  ;  7043.  Distrib.  Indo- 
Malaya. 

286.  Ficus  chartacea,  Wall. 

Tapli :  Fruit  green  ;  bush  ;  6755.  Distrib.  Burma, 
Malaya. 

287.  HuUettia  Griffithiana,  King. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Inflorescence  white  ;  10  to  12  ft.  ;  6564. 
Tasan  :  Pale  greenish  yellow  ;  6  f  t.  ;  6826.     Distrib.  Mergui. 

288.  Laporiea  stimulans,  Miq. 

Tasan  :  Stems  pale  violet ,  capsules  green  ;  tips  whitish; 
15  ft.    Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands. 

289.  Pellionia  javanica,  Wedd.,  var.  major. 

Tasan  :  Pinkish  white  ;  7030.  Tapli :  Petals  white, 
calyx  pink  ;  6777  and  7055.  Distrib.  Tenasserim  to  Penang 
and  South  Malay  Peninsula. 

This  form  has  unusually  long  petioles  4  in.  long  and 
leaves  8  in.  long  and  4  in.  wide,  in  fact  is  a  much  bigger 
plant  altogether  than  usual  but  the  species  is  very  \ariaJble. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  117 

The  name  javanica  was  given  by  Weddell  by  an  error.  It 
was  based  on  a  specimen  labelled  "  Java,  Lobb  "  but  Lobb 
got  it  in  Penang,  and  so  far  as  is  known  it  does  not  occm'  in 
Java. 

290.  Elatostemma  lineolatum  var.  major. 

Tasan  :  Pale  green  ;  6976.  Distrib.  India,  Malay  Penin- 
sula ;  but  usually  smaller. 

291.  Elatostemma  acuminatum,  Brongn. 

Tasan  :  Pale  green  ;  2  ft.  ;  6915.  Disfrih.  India,  Malay 
Peninsula,  Java. 

292.  Boehmeria  Klossii,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  ;  much  branched,  branches  slf  nder,  glabrous. 
Leaves  alternate  elliptic  cuspidate,  base  narrows,  blunt, 
herbaceous,  edge  serrate  tri-norved  beneath  tessellate,  5  in. 
long,  2  in.  wide  ;  petiole  '75  in.  long,  slender  ;  stipules 
lanceolate  acuminate.  Males  absent.  Females  in  small 
heads  •  1  in.  through.  Flowers  free,  shortly  stallc^ed  with  a 
minute  ovate  bract  at  base.  Perianth  tubular  elliptic, 
glabrous.     Style  simple,  elongate.     Achene  smooth. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  6  ft.  ;  6903.  AUied  to  B.  malabarica^ 
Wedd. 


CUPULIFERAE. 

293.  Castanopsis  tribuloides,  DC. 

Tapli  :  Fruit  green  ;  6816.  Distrib.  India.  The  fruit 
resemble  that  of  var.  echidnocarpa  but  the  leaves  are  larger 
and  eUiptic. 

ORCHIDEAE. 

294.  Dendrobium  tortile,  Lindl. 

Tapli  :  White,  tinged  and  washed  with  pale  crimson  ; 
lip  pale  yellow,  crimson  at  base  ;  6775.  Distrib.  Burma, 
Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

295.  Dendrobium  Pierardi,  Roxb. 

Tasan  :  Very  pale  pink  ;  lip  very  pale  green  ;  6895. 
Distrib.  Sikkim,  Bengal,  Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

296.  Dendrobium  Farmeri,  Roxb. 

Nam  Chut  :  Petals  pinkish  and  yellowish  white,  basal 
part  of  lip  orange ;  6688.  Distrib.  Himalaya,  Assam, 
Burma. 

297.  Dendrobium  (Aporum)  anceps,  Sw. 

Mamoli  :  Greenish-yellow,  hp  blotched  crimson  ;  6714. 
Tasan  :  Yellow  to  brown  ;  leaves  green,  edged  crimson  ; 
6886. 

298.  Dendrobium  (Pedilonum)  secundum.  Wall. 

Klong  Bagatae.  Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula  and 
Islands. 


118  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

299.  Eria  bractescens,  Lindl. 

Tapli  :  Yellow,  lip  crimson  except  at  tips  ;  6803. 
Distrih.  Mergui,  Malay  Peninsula. 

300.  Bromheadia  palustris,  Lindl. 

Mainland  shores  of  Takuapa  :  Lip  crimson  and  yeUow. 
Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands  to  Philippines.  This 
seems  to  be  its  most  northern  locality. 

301.  Thecostele  ZoUingeri,  Rchb. 

Tasan  :  Greenish-yeUow,  tips  whitish,  one  or  two  crim- 
son stripes  on  petals  ;  hood  blackish  crimson  ;  lip  white 
distally,  yellowish  at  centre,  wings  crimson  brown  ;  7024. 
Distrih.  Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula,  Borneo. 

302.  Vanda  teres,  Lindl. 

Mamoh,  Pakchan:  Three  upper  petals  faintly  tinged  and 
more  strongly  streaked  with  purple  ;  two  outer  ones  white, 
with  a  purple  spur  on  the  lower  side  ;  lower  petal  (lip)  light 
purple  except  interiorly  where  sides  and  lower  part  are 
yellow,  spotted  brown ;  lingual  portion  purple ;  6718. 
Distrih.  Assam,  Burma. 

303.  Saccolabium  ochraceum,  Lindl. 

Tapli :  Buff,  spotted  brown,  distal  half  of  lip  white ; 
6730.    Distrih.  Sikkim,  Tenasserim,  Ceylon,  Malabar. 

304.  Saccolabium  flavescens,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  stout,  2  in.  long.  Leaves  lorate  falcate,  bluntly 
unequally  bi-lobed ;  slightly  narrowed  to  base ;  midrib 
prominent,  7  in.  long,  1-75  in.  wide.  Racemes  from  lower 
part  rarely  with  a  single  short  branch,  4  in.  long.  Flowers 
small,  scattered.  Bracts  minute  deflexed,  lanceolate  acumi- 
nate. Pedicel  rather  thick,  -25  in.  long.  Upper  sepal 
oblong,  slightly  dilate  at  tip  rounded,  lower  ones  oblong- 
oblanceolate.  Petals  shghtly  smaller,  oblanceolate,  blunt. 
Lip  side  lobes  short  truncate,  erect,  midlobe  broadly  ovate, 
sub-reniform,  spur  broad  scrotiform  saccate  not  septate, 
a  short  broad  conic  callus  in  the  mouth.  Column  short  and 
broad,  rosteUum  short  acuminate  upcurved.  Pollinia  small, 
globose  on  a  rather  long  strap-shaped  pedicel  and  a  round 
ovate  opaque  yellow  disc. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Flowers  pale  greenish-yellow  ;  6582. 

305.  Trichoglottis  acutifolia,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  slender  elongate  over  8  in.  long.  Leaves  narrow 
lanceolate  very  unequally  bilobed  one  sometimes  -25  in. 
longer  than  the  other,  acute,  3* 5  in.  long,  •  .5  in.  wide,  sheaths 
tubular  dilate  upwards  '4  in.  long.  Flowers  very  small  on 
a  very  short  lateral  raceme  under  •  1  in.  long.  Sepals,  upper 
oblong  blunt,  spotted,  lower  ones  ovate  acute,  petals  nearly 
as  long,  narrower.  Lip  ;  side  lobes  oblong  truncate,  squared 
midlobe  large  fleshy  oblong  ovate  blunt  pustular,  spur  very 
short,  conic,  a  very  small  oblong  truncate  retuse  lobe  in  the 
mouth.  Column  short  broad,  thick  ;  anther  oblong  broad, 
large.  PoUinia  large  semi-ovoid,  pedicel  Unear,  broader 
at  tip  ;  disc  oblong  truncate.  RosteUum  lobes  triangular 
linear  acuminate  at  tip  deflexed. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  119 

Klong  Bagatae  :  Flower  yellow,  lip  white  ;  6561. 

Allied  to  T.  lanceolaria,  Bl.  of  Java,  but  the  leaves  are 
broader  unequally  bilobed.  The  sepals  and  petals  are  dis- 
tinctly spotted  with  brown  or  dull  red. 

306.  Dendrocolla  trichoglottis,  Ridl. 

Tasan  :  Yellowish-white,  top  of  hood  yellow  ;  6854. 
Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula.  A  plant  labelled  Sarcochilus 
hystrix,  Rehb.  Mergui  (Griffith)  in  Herb,  Lindley,  seems 
to  be  this  species. 

307.  Acriopsis  indica,  Wight. 

Tapli :  Greenish,  spotted  brown  ;  lip  white  ;  epiphyte  ; 
6768.     Distrib.  Tenasserim,  Penang. 

308.  Podochilus  lucescens,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  Flowers  white  ;  terminal ;  7006,  9049.  Distrib. 
Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula,  Java.  The  specimens  in  their 
narrower  leaves  approach  P.  khasiyana.  Hook.  f.  but  the 
lip  is  broad  ovate  as  in  P.  lucescens  and  nearly  trilobed  at 
base. 

309.  Galeola  hydra,  Rchb.  fil. 

Tasan  :  Lemon  yellow,  interior  petal  blotched  crimson 
brown  on  upper  parts  of  inside  ;  6841.  Distrib.  Sikkim, 
Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra,  Java. 

310.  Didymoplexis,  sp. 

Tasan  :  White  ;  No  leaves  ;  4  in.  ;  6969.  The  single 
specimen  of  this  little  plant  differs  from  D.  pallens  in  its 
very  slender  stem  and  smaller  flower,  but  the  flower  is  so 
delicate  that  it  is  almost  impossible  to  dissect  it  and  I  am 
unwilling  to  make  a  new  species  of  it. 

ZINGIBERACEAE. 

311.  Globba  pendula,  Roxb. 

Tasan  :  Orange  yellow  with  one  dark  brown  spot  ;  6882. 
Distrib.  Tenasserim. 

312.  Costus  speciosus  var.  argyrophyllus. 

Tasan  ;  White  ;  lip  and  hood  blotched  yellow  ;  calyx 
red  ;  7001.     Distrib.  Tropical  Asia. 

313.  Amomum  argyrophyllum,  sp.  nov. 

Rhizome  slender  elongate,  stem  3  ft.  Leaves  lanceolate 
acuminate,  long,  narrowed  to  petiole,  drying  pale  silvery 
silky  on  the  back,  14  in.  long,  2-5  in.  wide  •  petiole  4  in. 
long,  sheaths  12  in.,  ligule  short,  oblong,  rounded  adnate 
to  petiole.  Capitulum  conic,  2  in.  long  very  shortly  pedun- 
cled.  Bracts  coriaceous,  glabrous  oblong-lanceolate,  blunt 
about  12,  the  largest  1-25  in.  long,  -75  in.  wide,  striate. 
Inner  bracts  lanceolate  1  in.  long.  Calyx  1-25  in.  long, 
narrowly  funnel-shaped  with  three  short  apiculate  lobes. 
Corolla  tube  2  in.  long,  slender  at  base,  dilate  upwards, 
lobes  upper  broad  lanceolate,  hooded,  laterals  lanceolate, 
1 '25  in.  long,  -5  in.  wide.     Lip  obovate,  entire,  1  '5  in.  long, 


120  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

•  6  in,  wide  ;  tip  round,  mouth  of  tube  hairy.  Stamen 
filament  '25  in.  long,  anther  oblong,  crest  very  large,  reni- 
form  '5  in.  across,  top  of  anthers  divaricate. 

Tasan:  White;  lip  scarlet  at  base  then  yellow  in  middle; 
6952 ;  white,  lip  in  part  crimson  at  base,  yellow  towards 
tip  ;  7004. 

Allied  to  A.  dealhatum^  Roxb.  {A.  sericeum,  Roxb.) 
but  much  smaller  with  narrower  leaves. 

814.    Amomum  molle,  sp.  nov. 

Whole  plant  3  ft.  tall.  Rhizome  '25  in.  through. 
Leaves  lanceolate  caudate,  12  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  base 
shortly  narrowed,  glabrous  above,  softly  hairy  beneath, 
petiole  •  25  in.  long,  soft  hairy,  sheath  narrow,  hairy.  Spike 
sub-cylindric,  2  to  2-5  in.  through,  on  a  peduncle,  3  to  4  in. 
long  covered  with  pubescent  bracts,  the  uppermost  2  in. 
long,  lanceolate.  Bracts  of  head  lanceolate  sub-acute,  coria- 
ceous striate  pubescent,  edge  white,  hairy,  1-5  in.  long. 
Floral  bracts  tubular  with  3  points  pubescent,  tip  hairy. 
Calyx  pubescent  cylindric  with  3  ovate  lobes  hairy  at  hp,  •  6 
in.  long.  Corolla  tube  1  in.  long,  pubescent ;  lobes  linear 
oblong,  pubescent  blunt.  Lip  about  as  long,  base  oblong 
fleshy,  middle  depressed  sub-saccate  ;  sides  thin,  strongly 
veined,  centre  and  tip  linear-oblong,  fleshy.  Anther  oblong 
cells  distinct  fusiform  narrowed  to  the  ends  ;  crest  linear 
oblong  truncate,  rather  large  with  2  short  ears  at  the  angles 
of  the  anther.     Stigma  broad. 

Tasan  :  Yellow  ;  lip  spotted  crimson  along  the  middle 
hne  ;  6955  :  deep  yellow  spotted  orange  ;  69v*8. 

315.  Hornstedtia  albomarginata,  Ridl. 

Koh  Gab  :  Ground  flower  ;  carmine  edged  white  ;  6597. 

Only  a  single  head  without  leaves.  I  take  it  to  be  H. 
albomarginata  of  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

316.  Hornstedtia  rubrolutea,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  '5  in.  through.  Leaves  glabrous,  lanceolate- 
acuminate,  cuspidate,  3  ft.  long,  4  in.  wide,  petiole,  5  in. 
long,  ligule  oblong  rounded,  broad.  Heads  sub-cylindric, 
3  in.  long  on  a  peduncle  1  in.  long  with  rather  distant  bracts. 
Bracts  ovate,  thin,  1  in.  long,  -75  in.  wide,  edge  white,  hairy; 
upper  ones  narrower.  Calyx  narrow  tubular,  thin.  Corolla 
tube  1*5  in.  long,  slender,  lobes  linear  oblong  very  narrow, 
the  side  ones  almost  ovate  oblong.  Lip  narrow,  entire, 
dilate  and  rounded  at  tip,  •  75  in.  long,  •  20  in.  wide  at  tip. 
Anther  short  oblong.     No  crest. 

Tasan  :  Petals  scarlet  and  yellow  or  scarlet  and  white  ; 
6972  :  Crimson  blotched  yellow  ;  6929. 

The  flowers  are  small  for  this  section  of  Hornstedtia 
and  the  bracts  edged  with  white  hair  are  peculiar. 

MARANTACEAE. 

317.  Phrynium  capitatum,  Roxb. 

Tasan  :  Pinkish  white  ;  6  f  t. ;  6828.    Distrib.  India. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  121 

318.  Donax  grandis,  Ridl. 

Koh  Gah  :  White  ;  6610.  Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula  and 
Islands. 

AMARYLLIDEAE. 

319.  Curculigo  latifolia,  Dryand. 

Tapli  :  Yellow  ;  6754.  A  form  with  narrow  lanceolate 
acuminate  woolly  leaves  and  small  compact  stalked  woolly 
inflorescence.  Distrib.  Burma,  Malay  Peninsula  and 
Islands. 

320.  Crinam  asiaticum,  L. 

Pulau  Mohea  ofif  Trang  :  Flowers  white ;  stamens 
crimson  ;  6529.     Distrib.  Seashores,  India.  Malaya. 

TACCACEAE. 

321.  Tacca  palmatifida,  Bak.  Joum.  Linn.  Soc.  xv.  100. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  greenish  red.     Distrib.  Celebes. 

The  specimen  being  in  fruit  unfortunately  adds  little 
to  our  knowledge  of  this  plant  of  which  flowers  are  not 
known.     It  may  perhaps  be  a  lobed  form  of  T.  palmata. 

322.  Tacca  cristata.  Jack. 

Tasan  :  Dark  greenish  brown,  beard  blackish  crimson  ; 
6822.    Distrib.  Malaya. 

LILIACEAE. 

323.  Dracaena  siamensis,  Ridl.  ? 

Pulau  Mohea  off  Trang  :  Fruit  scarlet ;  6935.  In  fruit 
only.     Distrib.  Perlis. 

324.  Smilax  leucophylla  var.  latifolia. 

Tapli :  Fruit  green  ;  cUmber  ;  6751.  Distrib.  Tenas- 
serim  (Heifer)  ;  Perak  (Kunstler).  A.  de  CandoUe  quoted 
his  Tenasserim  plant  as  5.  Blumei,  a  totally  different  species. 
It  is  very  distinct  from  the  ordinary  forms  of  Smilax 
leucophylla,  and  is  probably  specifically  distinct,  but  at  pre- 
sent we  have  only  fruiting  specimens.  It  is  a  stout  woody 
climber  with  few  scattered  short  thorns.  Leaves  coriaceous, 
ovate  sub-apiculate  base  broad  edge  thickened,  glaucous 
beneath,  8  in.  long,  6  in.  wide.  Peduncle  in  fruit,  3  in.  long  ; 
pedicels  1  in.     Fruit  globose. 

325.  Peliosanthes  hypogyna,  sp.  nou. 

Tufted  plant  with  a  mass  of  thick  roots  at  base.  Leaf, 
petiole  7  in.  tall,  angled,  blade  elliptic-lanceolate,  8  in.  long, 
2-75  in.  wide  ;  nerves  conspicuous  about  10.  Racemes 
5  in.  long.  Flowers  pale  greenish  white,  solitary  in  the 
bracts,  -2  in.  wide.  Bracts  linear  acuminate,  lowest  ones 
%  in.  long  shortening  upwards.  Pedicel  -1  in.  long. 
Perianth  lobes  ovate-lanceolate,  blunt.  Staminal  ring 
adnate  almost  entirely  to  the  tube  and  to  the  ovary,  slightly 
notched  between  the  anthers.  Ovary  completely  inferior. 
Style  shorter  than  stamens.  Seed  globose,  pear-shaped. 
8 


122  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

Tasan  :  Pale  greenish  white  ;  7016.  Pulau  Mohea  : 
Fruit  waxy  blue ;  6534. 

This  belongs  to  the  set  with  completely  inferior  ovary, 
the  petals  and  sepals  connate  in  a  tube  adnate  to  ovary  and 
staminal  ring. 

XYRIDEAE. 

326.  Xyris  tuberosa,  sp.  nov. 

Rhizome  2  in.  or  more  long  with  densely  set  globose 
pubescent  (eventually  glabrous)  bulbs  %  in.  through.  Stem 
solitary  1  in.  long,  covered  with  sheaths.  Leaves  2  linear 
acuminate  7  in.  long,  -l  in.  wide,  flat  not  twisted.  Culm 
12  to  13  in.  long,  terets,  rather  slender.  Capitulum  globose, 
•25  in.  long.  Bracts  orbicular,  broad,  centre  elevated  not 
keeled,  edge  broad,  brown  scarious  and  becoming  lacerate. 

Mainland  shores  of  Takuapa  :  6615. 

This  species  is  allied  to  X.  anceps.  Lam.,  but  the  singu- 
lar rhizome  with  its  globose  bulb-joints  and  few  leaves  dis- 
tinguishes it  from  any  other  species.  The  flowers  are  all 
over  and  gone  in  the  specimens. 

COMMELINACEAE. 

327.  Pollia  sorzogonensis,  Endl. 

Tasan  :  White,  2-4  ft.  ;  6966,  6894.  Distrib,  Indo- 
Malaya. 

328.  Commelina  nudiflora,  L. 

Tasan  :  Blue  ;  6935.     Distrib.  Cosmopolitan. 

329.  Aneilema  conspicuum,  Kth. 

Tasan  :  Pale  violet ;  stamens  yellow  ;  6908.  Deep  lilac , 
stamens  yellow  ;  1  ft.  ;  6827.     Distrib.  India,  Malaya. 

330.  Floscopa  scandens,  Lour. 

Tapli :  Pale  lilac  ;  6743.  Tasan  :  Distrib.  Indo-Malaya, 
Australia. 

FLAGELLARIACEAE. 

331.  Flagellaria  indica,  L. 

Koh  Gab  :  Fruit  brownish  pink  ;  climber  ;  lower  part 
woody  ;  6603.    Distrib.  Tropical  Asia,  Seashores. 

PALMAE. 

332.  Areca  pumila,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  Pale  yellow  ;  6  ft.  tall ;  6823.  Distrib.  Malay 
Peninsula  and  Islands, 

I  take  this  to  be  A.  pumila,  Bl.,  but  the  specimen  is 
incomplete  and  it  might  be  A.  triandra. 

333.  Pinanga  canina,  Becc. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  crimson  brown  ;  stems  crimson  ;  6873. 
Distrib.  Province  Wellesley,  Borneo. 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  123 

I  take  this  to  be  Beccari's  canina.  There  is  a  leaf  ot 
it  collected  in  Tenasserim  by  Heifer,  labelled  P.  patnla,  Bl. 
by  Hooker,  but  I  do  not  think  it  is  that  species. 

334.  Nenga  macrocarpa,  Becc. 

Koh  Gah  :  Flowers  greenish-white  ;  tree  30  ft.  6588. 
Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula.     A  fruiting  specimen  only. 

335.  Iguanura  Wallichiana,  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  red  ;  6  to  7  ft.,  Stem  slender  ;  7010. 
Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula. 

336.  Licuala  distans,  sp.  nov. 

Leaf  petiole  (upper  part)  slender,  smooth,  unarmed 
•25  in.  through,  blade  2-5  ft.  long  cut  almost  to  the  base 
into  26  narrow  lanceolate  lobes  2  in.  across  at  the  widest 
part,  apex  cut  into  about  6  acuminate  acute  lobes  4  in.  long. 
Inflorescence  glabrous,  4-5  ft.  long  sheaths  6,  smooth,  lowest 
6  in.  long  with  a  low  rib  on  one  side,  mouth  brown  lacerate 
into  fibres.  Spadix  branches  2  from  each  sheath,  slender, 
6  to  9  in.  long.  "  Flowers  white."  Flowers  rf'mote,  pedicels 
•1  in.  long,  slender.  Bracts  minute,  lanceolate.  Calyx 
tubular,  narrowed  at  base  dilate  slightly  upwards  with  three 
very  short  points  •  12  in.  Petals  wide,  spreading  lanceolate 
acuminate,  -12  in.  long.  Stamens  6,  filaments  lanceolate- 
acuminate,  red  when  dry.  Anthers  linear,  oblong  yellow. 
Style  slender,  nearly  as  long  as  the  stamens. 

Koh  Jam  Noi,  near  Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  Flowers 
white ;  6638. 

This  species  approaches  L.  peltata  of  India  from  which 
it  differs  in  its  smaller  pedicelled  flowers  and  much  cut  up 
leaves. 

337.  Calamus  myrianthus,  Becc. 

Koh  Pipidon  near  Ghirbi  or  Krabi  :  Flowers  dull 
greenish  yellow  ;  centres  dark  greenish  brown  ;  6554. 
Tapli  ;  6814.     Distrih.  Tenasserim,  Siam. 

338.  Daemonorops  Lewisianus,  GrifT. 
Tasan.     Distrih.  Penang. 

339.  Zaiacca  Wallichiana,  Mart. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  brown  ;  6944.  Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula, 
Tenasserim. 

ARACEAE. 

340.  Alocasia  denudata,  Miq. 

Koh  Gall  :  Base  of  inflorescence  white,  remainder  pale 
buff ;  stems  mottled ;  6953.  Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula, 
Borneo. 

The  form  is  the  very  hastate  one  with  long  narrow 
lobes. 

341.  Aglaonema  Helferi,  Hook.  fil. 

This  is  allied  to  A.  ohlongifolium  but  smaller  in  all 
parts.  The  specimen  is  however,  rather  larger  than  the 
type. 


124  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

342.  Anadendron  montanam,  Schott. 

A  slender  form  with  smaller  ovate  leaves.  Tasan. 
Distrib.  Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

343.  Pothos  scandens,  L. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  (probably  heads)  pale  brown  i  mflores- 
cence  yellow  ;  7041.  Yellowish  white,  growing  on  tree  ; 
7057.    Distrib.  Indo-Malaya. 

CYPERACEAE. 

344.  Eyilinga  monocephala,  Rottb. 

Tasan  :  Greenish  white  ;  6937.     Cosmopolitan. 

345.  Cyperus  haspan,  L. 

Taph  :  mixed  with  Floscopa  scandens^  6743.  Cosmo- 
politan. 

346.  Cyperus  malaccensis.  Lam. 

Nam  Chut :  Fruit  brown,  5  ft.  ;  6693. 

347.  Cyperus  diffusus,  Vahl. 
Delisle  Island,  off  Takuapa. 

348.  Cyperus  diffusus  var.  pubisquama,  C.  B.  Clarke. 
Tapli  :  Brownish  green  ;  6756.     Distrib.  India,  Malaya. 

349.  Mariscus  microcephalus,  Presl. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  golden  brown  ;  6884.     Distrib.  Tropics. 

350.  Hypolytrum  latifolium,  Rich. 

Koh  Pipidon  :  6560.  Klong  Bagatae  :  Fruit  brown  var. 
penangense,  C.  B.  CI. 

Delisle  Island  off  Takuapa  :  6646.  Tasan  :  Brown  ;  sta- 
mens yellow  ;  6997.  The  var.  Penangense  made  a  species  by 
Clarke  and  based  on  a  single  specimen  from  Penan  g,  reap- 
pears again  in  this  collection  but  without  fruit  again.  It 
differs  from  H.  latifolium  in  its  much  longer  cyhndric 
fusiform  flowering  spikes.  Elongate  spikes  occur  occa- 
sionally in  specimens  of  otherwise  typical  H.  latifolium  but 
in  Penangense  they  are  all  like  this.  Until  we  get  fruit  it 
had  better  remain  as  a  variety. 

351.  Mapania  andamanica,  Kurz. 

Tasan  :  Fruit  brown  ;  7011.    Distrib.  Andamans. 

352.  Scleria  levis,  Retz. 

Koh  Gah  :  Fruit  black  or  white  ;  inflorescence  brown  ; 
6605.     Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Islands,  China. 

353.  Carex  indica,  L. 

Taph  :  6817.    Distrib.  Tropical  Asia. 

354.  Carex  mapanifolia,  sp.  nov. 

Tufted.  Leaves  thin,  elongate  lanceolate  long  narrowed 
to  the  base,  3  ft.  long,  2  in.  wide,  acutely  acuminate,  edges 
scabrid  enclosed  at  base  in  a  tuft  with  brown  lanceolate 
sheaths.  Inflorescence  12  in.  long  central,  peduncle  8  to  9 
in.  long  covered  with  sheaths  ;  panicle  dense,  3  to  1  in.  long 
of  dense  sessile  secondary  panicles  1  in.  long  or  less  ;  many 
flowered,  white  ;  outer  bracts  of  spikelet  empty  about  1% 


1920]  Ridley  :  Peninsular  Siamese  Plants.  125 

linear  ones  acuminate.  Upper  spikelets  male,  lower  with 
male  and  female  flowers.  Glumes  in  male  linear  lanceolate 
bifid  or  sub-caudate  at  lip.  Anthers  linear  •  2  in.  long  with 
very  slender  filaments.  Hermaphrodite  spikelets  smaller, 
lower  flowers  female,  upper  ones  male.  Utriclei  very  nar- 
row, thin  sub-cylindric,  deeply  bifid,  lobes  acute.  Ovary 
ellipsoid,  narrowed  at  the  base  and  jointed  at  the  top  with 
the  style.  Style  pale,  narrowed  upwards.  Stigmas  3,  pur- 
ple, hairy. 

Tasan  ;  white  ;  6881  :  Base  of  flower  brownish  ;  In- 
florescence whitish  ;  7012. 

This  remarkable  species  is  allied  to  C.  Helferi  of  Tenas- 
serim  differing  in  its  much  denser  spikes  and  broader  leaves. 
The  only  other  Carex  of  this  set  is  C.  scaposa  of  Cochin- 
China  and  China,  and  this  remarkable  broad-leaved  group 
appears  to  be  confined  to  this  region. 

GRAMINEAE. 

355.  Cyrtoccum  pilipes,  Stapf.     (Panicum  pilipes,  Nees.). 

Tapli :  Fruit  brown  to  yellow  ;  6765.  Distrib.  Tropical 
Asia  and  Polynesia. 

356.  Thysanolaena  acarifera,  Nees. 

Koh  Jam  Yai  oft'  Takuapa  :  A  dwarf  form  ;  6637. 
Distrib.  Tropical  Asia. 

357.  Neyraudia  madagascariensis,  Hook.  fil. 

Tasan  ;  6930.  Klong  Bagalae  :  6585.  Distrib.  Tropics. 
Africa  and  Asia. 

358.  Oxytenanthera  nigrociliata,  Munro. 

Tasan ;  7054.  Distrib.  India,  Malay  Peninsula, 
Sumatra,  Java. 

GNETACEAE. 

359.  Gnetum  Brunoniana,  Griff. 

Tasan  :  Green,  terminal  spike  whitish  ;  scandent  bush, 
9  ft.  ;  7026  :  Yellowish-white  ;  Bush  ;  6870.  Distrib.  Tenas- 
serim,  Malay  Peninsula. 

360.  Gnetum  scandens,  Roxb. 

Tasan  :  Fruit ;  green  ;  6902.    Distrib.  India,  Malaya. 

CYCADACEAE. 

361.  Cycas  siamensis  ? 

Koh  Gah  :  Cone  and  leaf  from  one  tree,  young  fruit 
from  second  tree,  ripe  fruit  from  third  tree  ;  6590.  Only  a 
young  male  cone  received  :  I  am  not  sure  whether  it  is  C. 
siamensis  or  C.  Rumphii. 

FERNS. 

362.  Alsophila  latebrosa,  Hook. 

Tasan  :  A  verv  pubescent  form  ;  7017  :  Glabrous  form  ; 
6868.     Distrib.  Indo-Malaya. 


126  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

363.  Trichomanes  javanica,  Bl. 

Tasan  :  6950.     Koh  Gah  :  6595.     Distrib.  Malay  Penin- 
sula and  Islands. 

364.  Pteris  quadriaurita,  Retz. 

Delisle    Island    off    Takuapa  :    6644.      Tapli :    6727. 
Distrib.  Tropics. 

365.  Microlepia  Speluncae,  L. 

Tapli :  6759  and  6739.     Distrib.  Tropics. 

366.  Lindsaya  lanuginosa,  Wall. 

Mainland  shores   of  Takuapa   inlet  :    6619.      Distrib. 
Burma,  Malay  Peninsula. 

367.  Asplenium  nitidum,  Sw. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  6569.     Distrib.  S.  Africa,  India,  Malay 
Peninsula. 

368.  Asplenium  unilaterale,  Lam. 

Tasan  :  7034.     Distrib.  Tropics  of  Old  World. 

369.  Diplazium  tomentosum,  Hook. 

Tasan  :  6959  and  6989.     Distrib.  Burma  and  Malay 
Peninsula. 

370.  Aspidium  cicutarium,  Sw. 

Tasan  :  7031.     Tapli  :  6735.     Distrib.  Tropics. 

371.  Niphobolus  adnascens,  Sw. 

Koh  Jam  Noi  near  Koh  Jam  Yai  off  Takuapa  :  6636. 
Distrib.  Old  World  and  Tropics. 

372.  Pleopeltis  nigrescens,  Bl. 

Tapli  :  6785.     Tasan  :  7056.     Distrib.  Indo-Malaya. 

373.  Pleopeltis  sinuosa.  Wall. 

Koh  Gah  off  Takuapa  :  6586.    Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula 
and  Islands. 

374.  Taenitis  blechnoides,  Sw. 

Klong  Bagatae  :  6496.     Distrib.  Ceylon,  Malay  Penin- 
sula, Tenasserim. 

375.  Stenochlaena  sorbifolia,  L. 

Pulau  Mohea  off  Trang  :  6531.     Distrib.  Tropics. 

376.  Gymnopteris  subrepanda.  Hook. 
Tasan  :  6995.     Distrib.  Malay  Peninsula. 

377.  Polybotrya  appendiculata  var.  Hamiltoniana,  Wall. 
TapU  :  6741.     Koh  Gah  :  6496.     Distrib.  Assam,  Tenas- 
serim, Malay  Peninsula. 

378.  Schizaea  dichotoma,  Sw. 

Koh  Prah  Tong  off  Takuapa  inlet.    Distrib.  Tropics. 

379.  Angiopteris  evecta,  Hoffm. 

Tasan  :  6866.    Distrib.  Tropical  Asia,  Australia  and 
Madagascar. 

380.  Lygodium  polystachyum,  Wall. 

Mamoli :  6710.    Distrib.  Tenasserim,  Malay  Peninsula. 


1920]  127 

in.    TWO  NEW  SIAMESE  PLANTS. 

By  H.  N.  Ridley,  C.M.G.,  F.R.S. 

I  have  found  the  following  undescribed  species  in  a 
small  collection  sent  me  by  Dr.  F.  W.  Foxworthy,  Forest 
Research  Officer,  F.M.S.  They  were  obtained  by  a  collector 
of  the  Forest  Department  who  accompanied  the  expedition 
of  the  F.M.S.  Museums  Department  to  the  northern  half  of 
the  Malay  Peninsula  in  1919  (antea  pp.  65-126). 

ANONACEAE. 

1.  Miliusa  concinna,  sp.  nov. 

Branches  slender,  bark  dark  brown  lenticelled  ;  young 
parts  pubescent.  Leaves  rather  distant  oblong  oblanceolate, 
blunt  or  subacute,  base  narrowed  unequally  bluntly  bilobed, 
membranous  to  subcoriaceous,  thin,  glabrous  or  when 
young  pubescent  on  the  midrib  beneath  ;  nerves  fine  incon- 
spicuous, 8  pairs,  4  in.  long,  1-5  in.  wide  ;  petiole  hairy  or 
glabrous,  -1  in.  long.  Flowers  solitary  or  2  on  tubercles  ; 
pedicel  slender,  hairy,  -5  in.  long.  Sepals  ovate  -12  in. 
long,  hairy,.  Petals  oblong,  tip  rounded,  hairy  on  both 
sides,  -25  in.  long.  Stamens  about  7  whorls,  20  in  all ; 
anthers  short,  narrow,  connective  broad,  flat  irregularly 
rounded.     Pistils  20,  densely  woolly  on  the  top. 

South-western  Siam :  Hat  Sunuk  near  Koh  Lak  (Hamid 
No.  3820)  ;  Koh  Lak  (Hamid  No.  3802).  Native  name 
Pom  rimpah. 

The  specimens  under  No.  3802  differ  in  being  much 
more  hairy,  the  branches  being  densely  50  ft.  tomentose, 
and  the  leaves  hairy  on  the  back  ;  «while  No.  3820  is  almost 
completely  glabrous,  only  the  young  parts  being  pubescent. 

DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 

2.  Pachyiioearpus  grandiflorus,  sp.  nov. 

Leaves  oblong  thin  but  stiff  coriaceous  elliptic  acutely 
short  acuminate,  base  narrowed,  blunt  ;  nerves  12  pairs 
prominent  beneath,  reticulations  conspicuous  beneath,  6  to 
8  in.  long,  2-5  to  4  in.  wide  ;  petiole  thick  -5  in.  long, 
pubescent.  Panicle  dense,  terminal  compact,  3  in.  long, 
4  in.  wide,  pubescent ;  pedicel  -1  in.  long.  Calyx  pubescent 
mealy,  •  1  in.  long,  lobes  lanceolate  acute,  cleft  nearly  to  the 
base.  Petals  -75  in.  long,  -25  in.  wide,  oblong  spathulate 
tip  broad  rounded,  glabrescent.  Stamens  15  in  2  rows. 
Ovary  cone-shaped  free  from  sepals,  puberulous.  Style 
short,  thick  ribbed  ;  stigma  rather  large.  Fruit  (unripe) 
ovoid  not  corky.  Calyx  entirely  covering  the  nut  except 
the  extreme  tip,  lobes  thin,  ovate  rounded,  whole  fruit  -75 
in.  long,  lobes  free  part  -1  in.  long.  Peninsular  Siam, 
Klong  Wang  Tapoh  in  Renong.  (Hamid  No.  3787) .  Native 
name  Mai  Sak. 

Perhaps  nearest  to  P.  Stapfianus  but  the  leaves  are 
thinner  and  have  more  nerves.  It  has  larger  flowers  than 
any  species  I  have  ever  seen. 


128  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

IV.    NEW  AND  RARE  PLANTS 
FROM  THE  MALAY  PENINSULA. 

By  H.  N.  Ridley,  C.M.G,,  F.R.S. 

This  paper  includes  a  number  of  new  species  recently- 
received  in  various  collections  chiefly  made  by  members  of 
the  Museums  Department  in  the  Federated  Malay  States 
and  others  from  a  collection  made  by  myself  in  Kelantan 
in  1917  ;  together  with  various  emendations  of  species  of 
earlier  collections  which  in  the  course  of  my  work  on  the 
Flora  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  I  have  found  it  necessary 
to  make. 

A  small  but  valuable  collection  was  made  on  the  East 
Coast  by  Mr.  I.  H.  N.  Evans,  Asst.  Curator,  Perak  Museum, 
of  which  several  new  species  are  described,  besides  which 
he  added  to  our  flora  Securidaca  tavoyana,  and  Celastrus 
paniculata  from  Pahang.  The  latter  is  a  verv  widely  dis- 
tributed plant,  occurring  in  India  and  throughout  the  Malay 
archipelago,  but  curiously  has  been  till  now  missing  from 
the  Malay  Peninsula. 

A  small  collection  made  by  a  native  employe  of  the 
F.M.S.  Museums  Department  on  Gunong  Binlang  on  the 
Kedah-Perak  boundary  contained  a  number  of  valuable 
additions  including  a  remarkable  new  Genus  of 
Rhanmaceae,  viz.  : — Oreorhamnus. 

On  the  invitation  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Graeme-Anderson 
I  visited  Kelantan  in  February  1917,  and  enjoyed  their 
hospitality  for  some  weeks  at  Chaning  Estate  on  the 
Kelantan  river  above  Kuala  Lebir,  and  on  my  way  back 
stopped  with  Mr.  R.  J.  Farrer  at  Kota  Bharu.  The  flora  of 
Kelantan  was  very  little  known.  I  formerly  received  a 
number  of  specimens  and  live  plants  from  Dr.  Gimlette 
at  Kuala  Lebir,  and  had  landed  once  in  1889  on  the  sea 
coast  near  the  mouth  of  the  Kelantan  river  for  a  few  hours. 
Near  the  Chaning  Rubber  Estate  were  patches  of  forest 
untouched  by  man  and  here  I  found  the  flora  typically 
Malayan,  but  vdth  a  good  many  new  species.  Here  in  a 
sandy  spot  in  a  forest  I  found  a  patch  of  Trichopus  Zey-^ 
lanicus  which  I  had  met  with  many  years  ago  at  one  spot 
in  the  Tahan  woods  in  Pahang  ;  otherwise  it  is  only  known 
from  Ceylon. 

A  day  or  two  at  Kuala  Lebir  gave  me  a  curious 
Rubiaceous  shrub  obviously  of  the  same  genus  as  a  dwarf 
shrubby  plant  collected  by  me  at  Klang  gates  and  which 
I  had  referred  to  Xanthophytum  Bl.  Further  examination 
showed  that  it  did  not  belong  to  Blume's  genus  and  I  have 
made  a  new  genus  Aleisanthia  for  the  two  species  :  it  is 
allied  to  the  genus  Grania.  Curiously  I  found  a  true 
Xanthophytum  on  the  banks  of  the  Pehi  river  opposite 
Chaning  Estate,  another  generic  addition  to  our  flora.  The 
country  round  Kota  Bharu  is  mostly  covered  with  rice 
fields  and  other  cultivations.  I  noticed  here  plots  of  Coleus 
tuberosus,   a   plant   seldom    cultivates   further   south.     I 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  129 

ascended  the  only  large  hill  in  the  neighbourhood  which 
was  called  simply  Gunong  and  added  a  number  of  interest- 
ing plants  from  this  rather  dry  rocky  place.  Near  the 
village  Tumpat  was  some  open  heath  country,  very  sandy  : 
The  flora  was  more  distinctly  Siamese,  and  I  found  here 
the  Anonaoeous  shrub  Rauwenhoffia,  a  typically  Siamese 
and  Cambodian  plant.  The  sandy  shores  at  the  mouth  of 
the  Kelantan  river  were  rather  disappointing,  the  chief 
•plants  there  being  Casuarina,  Spinifex,  Dodonaea,  and  the 
usual  common  sand-hill  plants  :  but  I  found  also  a  new 
species  of  Waltheria  which  was  very  interesting  as  the 
genus  is  mainly  South  American,  and  the  only  species  in  our 
area  (and  it  is  scarce)  is  W.  americana,  believed  to  have 
been  accidentally  introduced  into  Asia  from  South  America. 

I  was  much  indebted  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Graeme-Anderson, 
to  Mr.  Farrer  and  to  Dr.  Geale  of  Kuala  Lebir  for  their 
hospitality  through  which  alone  I  was  enabled  to  collect 
the  plants  of  this  Uttle  known  district. 

CAPPARIDACEAE. 

1.  Capparis  pubiflora,  var.  perakensis.  King. 

This  plant  is  only  known  from  specimens  collected  in 
Perak  by  Scortechini.  I  have  recently  found  it  again  in  the 
woods  surrounding  the  Chaning  Estate  on  the  Kelantan 
river.  It  seems  to  me  sufficiently  distinct  from  C.  piibiflora 
DC,  a  native  of  Timor  and  Celebes,  of  which,  however,  I 
have  only  seen  rather  poor  specimens.  The  bracts  in  this 
species  are  broad,  soft  and  woolly,  and  the  flowers  much 
more  woolly  than  in  our  species  which  has  also  short 
subulate  persistent  bracts  quite  glabrous.  The  young  shoots 
and  just  opened  leaves  are  thickly  pubescent,  and  the  whole 
flower  bud  pubescent  but  not  as  densely  as  in  the  Timor 
plant.  I  think  it  advisable  to  keep  it  as  a  separate  specites 
under  the  name  of  C.  perakensis. 

2.  Capparis  paniculata,  sp.  nov. 

A  long,  much  branched  but  slender  thorny  climber  with 
very  short  decm'ved  thorns  thickened  at  base  and  black  at 
tip  •  1  in.  long.  Leaves  thinly  coriaceous,  oblong  base  blunt 
tip  acute,  nerves  5  pairs,  5-5  in  .long,  2*5  in,  wide,  petiole 
•15  in.  long.  Flowers  in  a  lax  terminal  panicle  6  in.  long, 
peduncle  -75  in.  long,  slender  terminated  by  an  umbel  of 
about  6  flowers  ;  pedicels  -5  in.  long,  slender.  Flowers 
white  -25  in.  across.  Sepals  rounded,  oblong,  outer  pair 
boat-shaped,  coriaceous,  inner  pair  larger  with  a  broad  thin 
margin.  Petals  oblong  rounded  connate  at  base.  Stamens 
numerous  little  longer  than  the  petals  ;  white.  Anthers 
oblong,  short.  Gynophore  little  longer  than  tlie  filaments, 
ovary  conic. 

Kelantan  in  dense  forest  in  the  neighbourhood  of  Chan- 
ing Estate  on  the  Kelantan  River.     Feb.  1917. 

Distrib.  Borneo  :  Foot  of  Mt.  Braang  (Limestone), 
Sarawak  (Haviland  766). 


130  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums,  [Vol.  X, 

DIPTEROCARPACEAE. 

3.  Balanocarpus  ovalifolius,  sp.  nov. 

Tree.  Leaves  thin  coriaceous  ovate,  cuspidate,  base 
round  shortly  acuminate,  tip  blunt,  nerves  line  about  nine 
pairs,  often  very  inconspicuous,  midrib  elevate  often  on 
both  sides  reticulations  minute  but  conspicuous  3  in.  long, 
1-5  in.  wide,  petiole  slender  -5  in.  long.  Panicles  lax, 
glabrous,  drying  black,  2  in.  long,  rather  few  flowered. 
Flowers  considerably  larger  than  in.  B.  Curtisii.  Sepals 
imbricate  subcoriaceous,  glabrous  blunt.  Petals  twice  as 
long  15  in.  long,  oblong,  blunt  mealy  pubescent  outside. 
Stamens  15,  filaments  short  and  rather  broad  ;  anthers  sub- 
globose,  appendage  hair-like,  longer  than  the  rest  of  the 
stamens.     Ovary  with  stout  cylindi-ic  stylopediujn,  glabrous. 

Penang  :  Ayer  Hitam  at  300  ft.  (Haniff  3727,  Curtis 
426) .     Malay  name  "  Pinang  Baik." 

This  plant  was  originally  tentatively  assigned  to  B. 
laitfolius  Brandis,  a  Bornean  species,  by  Brandis  ;  but  it 
differs  entkely  in  the  venation  of  the  leaves  which  is  exactly 
that  of  B.  Curtisii.  From  that  species  it  differs  in  the 
broad  ovate  leaves  and  larger  flowers  apd  more  oblong 
longer  sq)als. 

STERCULIACEAE. 

4.  Waltheria  arenaria,  sp.  nov. 

Prostrate,  creeping  shrubby  plant  2  ft.  long,  twigs 
slender,  tips  tomentose.  Leaves  ovate  elliptic,  base  broad, 
edge  serrate  tomentose,  thickly  beneath,  thinly  above  when 
adult  nerves  thick  elevate  3-4  pairs  -5- -75  in.  long,  '25- -3 
in.  wide;  petiole  -25  in.  long,  stipules  Linear.  Heads  of 
flower  '3  in.  wide,  sessile,  densely  villous.  Bracts  linear 
villous.  Calyx  obconic  strongly  nerved,  villous,  lobes  5 
subulate.  Corolla  -25  in.  yellow,  petals  linear  oblong 
spathulate  long  clawed.  Stamens  5  with  very  short  fila- 
ments connate  at  base.  Style  slender  stigma  penicillate, 
pericarp  tomentose  at  top.  Capsule  smooth  brown  1 
seeded. 

Kelantan  in  sand  on  the  sea  shore  beneath  the 
Casuarinas  at  Kuala  Kelantan.     Abundant. 

An  interesting  find  as  W.  indica  L.,  the  only  other 
Asiatic  species,  is  a  tropical  weed  probably  like  most  of 
the  genus  of  American  origin.  It  is  an  erect  plant  and  is 
not  common  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  being  only  known 
from  Malacca  where  Griffith  collected  it. 

RUTACEAE. 

5.  Glycosmis  elata,  sp.  nov. 

Tall  shrub  6-8  ft.  high.  Leaves  18  in.  long  of  4  leaflets 
irregularly  spaced  oblong  elliptic  7  in.  long,  2  in.  wide, 
pale  beneath  ;  5-7  nerved,  nerves  strongly  inarching,  petio- 
lules  "25  in.  long.    Flowers  in  short  axiUary  ]ianicles  3  in. 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  131 

long,  rather  numerous  -1  in.  long,  white.  Sepals  small  5. 
Petals  -1  in.  long,  oblong  glabrous.  Stamens  10  unequal 
outer  5  as  long  as  petals,  inner  5  shorter.  Ovary  flask- 
shaped,  glabrous  ;  style  rather  stout.  Fruit  small,  ovoid 
beaked,  yellow  spotted  brown. 

Damp  woods  in  Kelantan  at  Chaning  and  in  the  Glam 
wood  near  Kota  Bahru. 

It  seems  most  nearly  allied  to  G.  sapindoldef.  Wall, 
of  Penang  Hill,  differing  in  larger  flowers,  glabrous  pistil 
and  unequal  stamens.  The  leaves  are  thickly  black-dotted 
on  the  back. 

6.  Zanthoxylum  hirtellum,  sp.  nov. 

Climber,  armed  with  short  decurved  thorns,  shortly 
rough-hairy.  Leaves  6  in.  long.  Leaflets  7-9,  coriaceous, 
elliptic,  blunt  cuspidate,  edge  crenulate  or  undulate,  hairy 
beneath  on  a  rather  slender  thorny  rachis,  midrib  thorny, 
2-5-3  in.  long,  1*25-1 -5  in.  wide;  nerves  about  8  pairs; 
petiolules  -1  in.  long  or  less.  Panicles  axillary  2-3  together, 
slender  2  in.  long,  few  flowered.  Flowers  -1  in,  wide. 
Fruit  spikes  3  in.  long,  pubescent,  with  short  branches. 
Coccus  oval  pubescent  wrinkled  -25  in.  long.  Seed  slightly 
flattened  smooth  black  shining  nearly  •  25  in ,  long. 

Singapore:  Yo  Chu  Rang  (Ridley  11291).  Pahang  : 
Temerloh  (Ridley).  Bindings  :  (Curtis),  Lumut  (Ridley 
10281).  This  plant  is  covered  with  short  rough  hairs.  It 
is  near  the  Javanese  Z.  Horsfieldii^  Turcz.  and  Z.  nitidiim 
of  China  and  Cochin-Cliina,  but  those  are  glabrous. 

GERANIACEAE. 

7.  Connaropsis  sericea,  sp.  nov. 

A  tree.  Leaves  thinly  coriaceous,  oblong  sharply 
acuminate  base  round,  nerves  8  pairs,  slender  but  prominent 
beneath  subglaucous  beneath,  reticulations  conspicuous 
7-7-5  in.  long,  3  in.  wide  ;  petiole  rather  stout,  -5  in.  long. 
Panicles  raceme-like  from  the  upper  axils  12  in.  long, 
branches  -25  in.  long,  puberulous.  Sepals  ovate,  blunt  silk 
tomentose.  Petals  oblong,  clawed,  upper  part  deep  red, 
claw  pale  -1  in.  long.  Stamens  shorter  filaments  very 
slender  ;  anthers  ovate  witli  wide  cells.     Styles  short,  free. 

Pahang  :  Pianggu,  Endau  River  (Evans) .  Flowers  red. 
Aug.  1917. 

A  very  distinct  species  with  large  leaves  as  big  as  those 
of  C.  macrophylla  but  much  thinner  and  subglaucous 
beneath,  the  panicles  long,  slender  puberulous  with  silky 
tomentose  sepals. 

RHAMNACEAE. 

Genus  OREORHAMNUS,  gen.  nov. 

A  shrub  or  tree  ?  erect.  Leaves  alternate  lanceolate 
dentate.  Flowers  small  axillary  hairy  calyx  campanulate 
lobes    5    triangular.      Petals    minute    spathulate    bilobed 


132  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

enwrapping  anthers  stamens  5  opposite  petals,  filaments 
rising  from  a  thin  disc  lining  the  calyx  tube,  ovary  free  3 
lobed,  ovules  1  in  each  cell.     Styles  3.     Species  one. 

8.  Oreorhamnus  serrulatus,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  or  tree,  erect.  Buds  red  hairy.  Leaves  alter- 
nate thinly  coriaceous  lanceolate  narrowed  to  both  ends, 
dentate  serrulate  glabrous,  nerves  6  pairs  with  midrib 
elevate  beneath,  sunk  above,  reticulations  very  close  on  both 
sides  very  fine,  3  inches  long,  1  in.  wide,  petiole  -5  in.  long 
pubescent  when  young.  Flowers  very  smaU  axillary  on 
the  young  shoots,  hairy  pubescent  shortly  pedicelled.  Calyx 
campanulate  lobes  5  triangular  acute  hairy  outside.  Petals 
very  small  spathulate  bilobed,  lobes  rounded,  glabrous 
enclosing  the  anther.  Stamens  5,  opposite  petals  and 
enwrapped  therein,  filaments  slender  rising  from  a  very 
thin  disc  lining  the  calyx  tube.  Anthers  ellipsoid,  dehiscing 
longitudinally.  Ovary  3-lobed  free  to  base,  hairy  :  ovules 
1  in  each  cell.  Styles  3  short  cylindric  truncate.  Fruit  not 
seen. 

Kedah-Perak  boundary :  Gunong  Bintang  (Native 
Collector,  F.M.S.  Mus.). 

SAPINDACEAE.  ;^ 

9.  Lepisanthes  hirta,  sp.  nov. 

Simple  tree-like  shrub.  Branches,  underside  of  leaves, 
rachis,  midrib  above  and  inflorescence  softly  hairy.  Leaf 
over  2  ft.  long,  leaflets  10,  alternate  but  approximate  elliptic 
lanceolate  shortly  acuminate  ;  nerves  about  18  pairs,  12  in. 
long,  4  in.  wide  membranous,  petiolule  thick  -15  in.  long. 
Panicles  axillary  4-5  in.  long  branches  few  distant,  racemose. 
Flowers  •!  in.  wide.  Sepals,  5,  orbicular,  coriaceous, 
pubescent,  edge  ciliate.  Petals  4,  ovate  round  blunt  nearly 
twice  as  long,  glabrous,  scales  at  base  oblong,  white,  woolly. 
Stamens  8,  short  within  the  undulate  disc,  glabrous. 
Rudimentary  pistil  densely  hairy. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Forest. 

A  remarkably  hairy  species,  most  of  the  genus  being 
nearly  glabrous  except  the  inflorescence.  A  plant  got  on 
the  Pehi  River  had  much  smaller  oblong,  blunt  leaflets 
5*5  in.  long  by  2  in.  wide. 

LEGUMINOSAE. 

10.  Vigna  hirtella,  sp.  nov. 

Stems  slender,  hairy.  Leaves,  petiole  2  in.  long  slender 
hairy  ;  leaflets  ovate  acuminate,  the  lower  ones  somewhat 
rhomboid,  obscurely  lobed,  nerves  fine,  hairy  beneath,  2  in. 
long  1-1 '5  in.  wide,  petiolule  of  mud-leaflet  5  in.  long. 
Peduncle  hairy,  slender.  Flowers  few  '5  in.  long,  yellow. 
Bracts  at  base  Unear  acuminate.  Calyx  campanulate  with 
short  broad  equal  teeth.  Standard  obovate,  round,  broad 
with  2  short  points  at  base  by  claw,  wings  broadly  round 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  133 

at  tip,  keel  short,  broad.  Stamens  slender.  Style  plumed  on 
lower  edge  at  tip.  Ovary  glabrous.  Pod  narrow  liniear 
glabrous  2  in.  long  1  in.  wide. 

Kelantan  :  Bank  of  River  Lebir  near  Chaning. 

Distrib.  Timor  Laut  (Riedel  in  Herb.  Kew) . 

One  of  the  plants  commonly  confused  with  V.  luteola, 
Benth.,  a  South  American  plant.  The  fruit  is  described 
from  the  Timor  Laut  plant  which  is  I  think  the  same  species, 
the  pod  however,  is  not  ripe. 

11.  Crudia  Evansii,  sp.  nov. 

Glimbhng  plant,  glabrous.  Leaves  6  in.  long  Including 
petiole.  Leaflets  3-4,  thin,  coriaceous  elliptic  shortly  acumi- 
nate 6-nerved  ;  nervules  nearly  as  conspicuous,  reticulations 
distinct,  4  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  petiolules  '2  in.  long. 
Racemes  dense,  scurfy  velvety  red,  2  in.  long,  rachis  thick. 
Flowers  crowded,  shortly  pedicelled.  Sepals  ovate,  blunt 
•1  in.  long.  Stamens  10,  glabrous.  Pistal  conic,  densely 
hairy. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  (Evans) .  "  Climbing  plant 
anthers  yellow,  petals  inconspicuous.  Sepals  brownish." 
January  1917. 

MYRTACEAE. 

12.  Eugenia  jasminifolia,  sp.  nov. 

Small  tree.  Leaves  thin,  coriaceous  ovate,  blunt 
caudate  base  cuneate  nerves  numerous  parallel  but  invisible 
above  and  always  so  beneath,  1  in.  long  -25  in.  wide  ; 
petiole  -1  in.  long.  Flowers  small  in  sessile  terminal  and 
axillary  clusters  about  5.  Bracts  broad,  oblong  papery. 
Calyx  oblong  cylindric  sUghtly  narrowed  at  the  base  -12  in. 
long  ;  lobes  rounded  broad  persistent.  Petals  free,  rounded. 
Stamens  very  short. 

Negri  Sembilan  :  Tampin  Hill  (nat.  coll.  F.M.S.  Mus.). 

AlUed  to  E.  tecta.  King,  in  its  small  sessile  heads  but 
the  leaves  are  quite  different  and  the  flowers  very  small. 

13.  Eugenia  laxiuscula,  sp.  nov. 

Bark  of  twigs  red.  Leaves  narrow,  oblong,  lanceolate 
acuminate  base  cuneate,  nerves  numerous  subparallel  faint 
6-25  in.  long,  1*9  in.  wide  petiole  "25  in.  long.  Panicles 
wide,  spreading,  6  in.  long,  4  in.  wide,  lax.  Calyx  lobes 
distinct,  short  rounded  semielliptic,  tube  goblet-shaped  with 
a  rather  long  pseudo-stalk  -2  in.  long.  Corolla  cauyptrate. 
Stamens  very  numerous  •  4  in.  long. 

Pulau  Butang,  Butang  Ids,  West  of  Langkawi  Ids. 
(Curtis  975). 

King  refers  this  number  to  E.  inophylla,  Roxb.,  from 
which  it  differs  in  its  longer,  narrower  leaves  with  fewer 
nerves,  its  red  bark  wide  panicle,  longer  calyx-tube  and 
distinct  lobes  (quite  absent  in  inophylla)  and  its  stamens 


134  •     Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Mnseumfs.  rVoi..  X, 

twice  as  long.     It  has  the  habit  of  the  Javanese  laxiflora,  BL, 
but  the  calyx  tube  of  that  is  remarkably  short  and  round. 

14.  Eugenia  Evansii,  sp.  nov. 

Branchlets  dark  brown.  Leaves  thin,  coriaceous, 
elliptic  to  oblong  abruptly  acuminate  base  very  shortly 
cuneate,  nerves  very  numerous  faint  horizontal,  intra- 
marginal  one  close  to  edge  6  in.  long  2-75  in  wide  ;  petiole 
•2  in.  long.  Cymes  terminal  and  in  upper  axils  short, 
branches  angled  spreading  ending  in  3-5  sessile  flowers,  1-5 
in.  long  and  wide.  Flowers  small.  Calyx  broad,  goblet- 
shaped  with  a  pseudostalk,  lobes  O.  Petals  calyptrate  very 
small.  Stamens  fairly  numerous  very  short,  white,  '1  in. 
long.     Style  as  long. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  (Evans) . 

One  of  the  Syzygium  section  but  unlike  any  known  to 
me. 

15.  Eugenia  Graeme- Andersoniae,  sv.  nov. 

Tree.  W  ith  long  pendent  branches.  Leaves  thin, 
coriaceous,  narrow  lanceolate  long  acuminate  both  ends 
pendent  ;  very  finely  parallel-nerved,  4  in.  long  •  75  in.  wide, 
petiole  -15  in.  long.  Cymes  axillary  1-2  in.  an  axil, 
3  or  4-flowered  1  in.  long  or  less.  Peduncle  and  branches 
rather  stout,  angled.  Bracts  minute,  triangular  acuminate. 
Calyx  obconic  with  very  short  points,  -25  in.  long.  Petals 
free  rounded,  -15  in.  long  white.  Stamens  very  numerous, 
fine  with  very  small  anthers,  about  •  5  in.  long. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning.  along  the  river  bank.     Abundant. 

A  very  handsome  tree,  remarkable  for  the  flowers 
being  in  small  cymes  in  the  axils  of  almost  every  leaf.  The 
leaves  hang  down,  the  flowers  standing  erect  on  the  spread- 
ing and  pendulous  branches. 

I  have  much  pleasure  in  associating  this  beautiful  tree 
with  Mrs.  Graeme  Anderson  through  whose  hospitality  at 
Chaning  Estate  I  was  enabled  to  make  extensive  collections 
in  this  hitherto  botanically  unexplored  part  of  Kelantan. 

16.  Barringlonia  pedicellata,  sp.  nov. 

Branches  slender.  Leaves  membranous,  broad,  lanceo- 
late acuminate,  narrowed  to  base ;  denticulate,  nerves 
slender  10  pairs,  6  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  petiole  -2  in.  long. 
Raceme  terminal,  slender  12  in.  long.  Flowers  distant 
pedicels  slender  -4  in.  long.  Bracts  oblong  blunt  -1  in. 
long.  Calyx  tube  campanulate  lobes  ovate,  blunt  '12  in. 
long.  Corolla  -5  in.  across  ;  lobes  oblong  Stamens  twice 
as  long.     Style  -4  in.  long. 

Pahang  :  Labong,  Endau  River  (Evans,  Aug.  1917). 

Allied  to  B.  spicata,  Bl.,  but  the  flowers  are  borne  on 
long  slender  pedicels  as  in  B.  fiisiformis.  King  ;  the  leaves 
are  exactly  those  of  B.  spicata.  Ripe  fruit  I  have  not  seen 
but  in  the  quite  young  state  it  appears  to  be  winged. 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants,  135 

MELASTOMACEAE. 

17.  Sonerila  barbata,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  woody,  erect,  stout  14  in.  tall,  densely  brown, 
hairy.  Leaves  obovate  to  oblanceolate  membranous  sub- 
acute, base  blunt  unequally  bilobed  glabrous,  fi-nerved  from 
base,  transverse  nerves  subhorizontal,  6-8  in.  long  2-75  to 
3  in.  wide  ;  petiole  1  in.  long,  thick,  denselv  brown.,  hairy. 
Cymes  in  upper  axils  1  •  25-3  in.  long  ;  peduncle  slender, 
hairy.  Flowers  secund,  about  15  mauve  Capsule  cam- 
panulate  not  angled,  pustular  25  in.  long  ;  pedicels  densely 
hairy  -12  in.  long. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Woods. 

The  leaves  are  spotted  with  white. 

BEGONIACEAE. 

18.  Begonia  barbellata,  sp.  nov. 

Whole  plant  14  inches  tall.  Stem  somewhat  woody, 
glandular  hairy.  Leaves  membranous  obliquely  lanceolate 
acuminate,  irregularly  crenate-serrate,  base  narrowed  to 
a  blunt  tip,  above  glabrous  except  for  a  few  scattered  hair- 
like trichomes,  beneath  hairy  on  nerves  and  edge  ;  nerves 
slender  4  pairs,  5  in.  long,  1-75  in.  wide,  petiole  •1--25  in. 
long.  Stipules  lanceolate  acuminate  papery,  hairy  ;  male 
flowers  terminal  and  in  upper  axils.  Peduncle  slender 
rising  from  a  tuft  of  lanceolate  acuminate  hairy  bracts, 
hairy  '5  in.  long.  Flowers  2  or  3  whiie,  pedicel  '4  in.  long. 
Sepals  oblong  rounded,  hairy  on  the  back  -25  in.  long. 
Female  flowers  larger  usually  in  lower  axils.  Capsule 
oblong  slightly  narrowed  at  the  base  with  three  equal  wings 
•4  in.  long  -25  in.  wide. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Woods.     Very  local. 

This  is  certainly  allied  to  B.  pnbescens,  Ridl.  of 
Sarawak,  but  to  nothing  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  ;  from  that 
species  it  differs  in  its  much  taller  size,  rather  larger  flowers 
and  entirely  different  fruit. 

CUCURBITACEAE 

19.  Hodgsonia  capniocarpa,  sp.  nov. 

Big  climber  with  strong  tendrils.  Leaves  bright  shining 
green,  coriaceous  6  in.  long  7  in,  wide,  palmate  base  cordate 
lobes,  short,  acute  ;  nerves  beneath  hairy  reticulations  fine 
conspicuous  ;  petiole  1  in.  long,  Male  raceme  woody,  stout 
growing  to  6  in.  long.  Bracts  thick,  ovate  -1  in.  Calyx- 
tube  -5  in.  long,  thick,  lobes  very  short,  scurfy.  Corolla 
tube  2  in.  long,  thick  scurfy  pubescent  2  in.  across  when 
open.  Fruit  6  in.  wide,  depressed  globose  velvety-grey 
woody.     Seeds  2  in,  long  imbedded  in  a  firm  oily  pulp. 

Pahang  river  (Ridley).  Malacca  (Maingay).  Penang 
(Phillips  Porter,  WaUich  6684). 


Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

This  has  been  referred  to  Hodgsonia  heteroclita.  Hook, 
f.  of  India,  from  which  it  differs  in  its  hairy  underside  of 
the  coriaceous  leaves,  much  smaller  flower  with  a  much 
thicker  calyx  tube  and  shorter  lobes,  and  its  fruit.  H. 
heteroclita  has  a  pointed  red  fruit,  thin  walled.  That  of 
this  species  is  woody,  velvety,  grey  and  quite  flat  at  the  top 
and  base.  If  dropped  in  water  it  can  be  taken  out  quite 
dry  owing  to  its  velvety  coat.  It  is  called  Akar  Kapaynng 
from  the  resemblance  of  the  seed  to  that  of  Pangium.  It 
is  probable  that  it  is  the  Trichosanthes  Kadam  Miquel  of 
Sumatra,  but  his  description  is  incomplete. 

PASSIFLORACEAE.  '     ^ 

20.  Adenia  grandifolia,  sp.  nov. 

Glabrous  climber.  Leaves  membranous  becoming 
thinly  coriaceous  broadly  ovate  elUptic  acuminate,  base 
cuneate  decurrent  shortly  on  the  petiole  with  2  large  glands 
4-6*5  in.  long,  4-6-5  in.  wide  ;  nerves  prominent,  one  pair 
basal,  one  pair  above  nervules  transverse  ;  petiole  1-1  •  5  in. 
long.  Panicle  short,  branched  1  •  5  in.  long,  many  flowered. 
Bracts  lanceolate  acuminate  -15  in.  long.  Male  flowers 
semifusiform  flask-shaped  -15  in.  long.  Calyx  lobes 
recurved  linear  acuminate.  Petals  from  mouth  of  tube  as 
long  linear  acuminate  recurved  thinner.  No  corona. 
Stamens  from  base  much  shorter  than  the  tube  anthers, 
apiculate. 

Pahang  :  Kuala  Tekam  and  Kota  Tongkat.  (Evans, 
July  1917).  Sumatra  ;  Ayer  Mancior  near  Padang  (Beccari 
743^. 

The  much  larger  leaves  and  large  flowers  clustered  on 
a  short,  stout  panicle  make  this  very  different  from  the 
other  species. 

ARALIACEAE. 

A  troublesome  genus  to  identify  from  herbarium 
specimens  as  they  preserve  badly  and  we  frequently  get  only 
the  upper  part  of  the  plant  without  the  lower  often  pinnate 
leaves. 

21.  Arthrophyllum  angustifolium,  sp.  nov. 

Small  tree.  Lower  leaves  pinnate  over  2  ft.  long  ; 
leaflets  29,  coriaceous  linear  lanceolate  acuminate 
6  in.  long  -5  in.  wide  nerves  faint,  sunk  above  ;  petioles 
•  1  in.  long,  upper  leaves  simple  broader  and  shorter,  petiole 
slender,  1  in.  long.     Inflorescences  axillary  and  terminal, 

Peduncles  1-5  in.  long  or  less,  secundary  peduncles  •  25  in. 
edicels  -l  in.  long.  Flowers  very  small.  Caljrx  very 
short  undulate,  buds  short  ovoid.  Petals  ovate  valvate  4. 
Stamens  4. 

Perak  :  Gunong  Kledang  (Ridley  9683). 

Curious  in  its  narrow  leaflets  and  very  small  flowers. 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants  137 

22.  Arthrophyllum  congestum,  sp.  nov. 

Small  tree.  Leaves  10  in.  or  more  with  11  leaflets, 
fleshy  coriaceous  oblong  lanceolate  acuminate  base  broad 
but  shortly  narrowed  obliq[ue,  nerves  slender,  7  pairs,  very 
faint,  4  in.  long  1*25  wide,  petiolules  -15- -2  in.  long. 
Upper  leaflets  simple,  oblong  very  oblique  at  base,  2-5  in. 
long  1*25  in.  wide,  petiole  slender  -25  to  -75  in.  long. 
Inflorescence  axillary  and  terminal,  peduncles  1*5  in.  long 
or  less.  Flowers  crowded  in  a  head,  pedicels  -1  in.  long. 
Calyx  very  short  edge  undulate.     Petals  4,  ovoid  in  bud. 

Selangor  :  Klang  Gates  (Ridley  13421)  :  Dindings ; 
Lumut  (Ridley  8374). 

23.  Schefflera  lanceolata,  Ridl. 

Heptapleurum  avene.  King,  Journ.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal 
Ixvii,  part  ii,  p.  47,  not  of  Miquel. 

This  plant  seems  to  be  quite  distinct  from  Miquel*s 
species  in  its  diff'erently  shaped  leaves  and  smaller  flowers  : 
King's  description  is  taken  from  the  Singapore  plant.  The 
leaves  are  mostly  simple  but  when  the  plant  grows  suffi- 
ciently large,  it  bears  at  the  top  trifoliate  leaves. 

24.  Schefflera  capitellata,  sp.  nov. 

Epiphyte.  The  leaves  8-foliate,  leaflets  lanceolate  acute 
narrowed  to  the  base  ;  nerves  fine  coriaceous  puberulous 
beneath  3-5  in.  long,  1  in.  wide,  petioles  1  in.  long  petiole 
7  in.  long.  Racemes  scurfy  tomentose  18  in.  long  pedun- 
cles -5  in.  long,  heads  -4  in.  through.  Bracts  minute  and 
caducous  (not  seen) .  Flowers  pubescent  5-angled,  truncate, 
quite  sessile.     Petals  connate  in  a  cap.    Stamens  6,  purple. 

Mountaih  forests  : — Perak  :  Bujong  Malacca.  Penang 
HiU  at  2,500  ft.  (Curtis). 

This  plant  has  been  confused  with  the  much  larger 
H.  cephalotes,  Clarke,  which  occurs  on  sea  cliffs  and  banks, 
and  has  very  much  larger  leaflets  broadly  oblong  cuspidate 
and  much  larger  panicles  and  the  leaves  are  not  sub- 
puberulous  beneath.  In  a  plant  I  got  on  Penang  Hill  the 
leaflets  are  oblanceolate,  broadest  at  the  top.  A  plant 
collected  by  Wray  (1542)  on  Ulu  Batang  Padang  at  4,900 
ft.,  may  be  this  but  the  specimen  I  have  seen  is  too  young 
and  Wray  describes  it  as  a  large  tree. 

25.  Schefflera  Klossii,  sp.  nov. 

A  large  climber.  Branches  pale  shining,  young  parts 
white,  scurfy.  Leaves  petiole  stout  2*5  in.  long  ;  leaflets 
5,  elliptic  abruptly  acutely  acuminate,  base  narrowed  stiffly 
coriaceous,  midrib  beneath  prominent  ;  nerves  5  pairs 
elevate  quite  glabrous,  7  in.  long,  3  in.  wide,  basal  ones 
smaller  with  shorter  petiolules,  petiolule  of  terminal  one 
1  •  4  in.  long.  Basal  bracts  of  inflorescence  lanceolate  acumi- 
nate coriaceous  scurfy  narrow  1*5  in.  long.  Panicles  5 
scurfy  9  in.  long.  Umbels  simple,  numerous,  peduncles  '25 
in.  long.     Flowers  small,  pedicels  '05  in.  about  10,  scurfy. 


138  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

Calyx  obconic,  scurfy,  lobes  very  obscure.  Corolla  in  bud 
ovoid  blunt  -05.  Petals  5  ovate  blunt  veined.  Stamens  5. 
Styles  combined  in  a  truncate  cone,  with  ^ve  minute 
stigmas. 

Perak  :  Changkat  Mentri.  Large  climber,  pink  and 
white.     Sept.  1918  (Kloss  6516.) 

AUied  to  .S'.  Scortechinii,  Ridl.,  but  the  leaflets  are 
narrowed  at  the  base,  and  there  are  no  bracts  to  the  umbels 
which  are  fewer  flowered  and  with  longer  pedicels. 

RUBIACEAE. 

Genus  ALEISANTHIA,  gen.  nov. 

Shrubs.  Leaves  thin,  coriaceous,  pale  or  white  beneath. 
Stipules  free  large,  lanceolate.  Racemes  sometimes  2-bran- 
ched  in  upper  axils  ;  many  flowered.  Flowers  small,  yellow 
secund.  Calyx  subcylindric,  limb  campanulate,  large  with 
5  short  points.  Corolla  tube  short,  limb  campanulate  hairy 
in  the  mouth,  lobes  short  5-6.  Stamens  5-6  included  in  the 
corolla,  adnate  to  the  limb.  Style  slender.  Stigma  cupulate 
globose.  Capsule  hairy,  pericarp  splitting  into  two  woody 
carpels  dehiscing  on  the  inner  face,  seeds  numerous  minute 
angular  reticulate. 

Species  2.  A.  rupestre,  Xanthophytum  rupestre,  Ridl. 
Journ.  Straits  Branch  Royal  Asiat.  Soc.  No.  54,  1910,  p.  44. 
Selangor.     A.  sylvatica   (postea).     Kelantan. 

This  genus  is  allied  to  Greenia  from  which  it  diflfers 
in  its  axillary  inflorescence,  short  cup-shaped  corolla, 
clubbed  style,  and  stamens  adnate  to  upper  part  of  corolla 
with  very  short  filaments. 

26.     Aleisanthia  sylvatica,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub,  15  ft.  tall  hairy.  Leaves  lanceolate  cuspidate 
acuminate,  long  narrowed  to  base  stiff,  membranous  above, 
glabrous  beneath  white  hairy  nerves  25  pairs  fine  nervules 
transverse  parallel  all  a  little  elevated  7-5  in.  long  2-25  in. 
wide,  petiole  winged  to  base.  Stipules  oblong  lanceolate 
cuspidate  and  shortly  keeled  -4  in.  long.  Inflorescence 
axillary  peduncle  -5  in.  long  with  two  racemes  of  distant 
secund  flowers  4  in.  long.  Bracts  linear  acuminate 
setaceous  -1  in.  long  very  narrow.  Pedicels  very  short 
hardly  any.  Calyx  tubes  cylindric  slightly  narrowed  at  the 
base,  densely  hairy,  limb  campanulate  glabrous,  large  with 
5  short  acute  points.  Corolla  yellow  -25  in.  long,  tube 
short  cylindric,  little  longer  than  the  calyx  then  dilated  to 
a  limb,  broadly  cup-shaped  nearly  -25  in.  long,  all  hairy 
outside  and  in,  lobes  very  short  5  or  6  ;  mouth  inside  densely 
white  woolly.  Stamens  5  or  6  glabrous  adnate  to  upper 
part  of  the  tube  and  barely  projecting  at  all  ;  filaments  very 
short.  Anthers  much  longer,  oblong  linear  with  a  short 
rounded  appendage  at  the  top.  Style  glibrous,  cylindric 
from  a  conic  persistent  base,  narrowed  to  the  tip  little  longer 
than  the  corolla.  Stigma  large,  globose.  Capsule  fusiform 
densely  hairy  with  persistent  calyx  and  style  base,  sepai-ating 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  139 

into  two  woody  fusiform  carpels,  which  dehisce  on  the  inner 
face.  Seeds  very  numerous,  small  irregularly  angled, 
reticulate,  brown. 

On  hills  in  forest  at  Kuala  Lebir  above  the  river, 
Kelantan,  in  flower  and  fruit  Feb.  1917. 

27.  Xanthophytum  capitatum,  sp,  nov. 

Stem  about  12  in.  slender,  woody,  hairy.  Leaves 
alternate  (the  second  being  suppressed)  thin  ovate  elhptic 
acuminate  acute  ;  nerves  about  18  pairs  slender  ascending, 
above  sprinkled  with  long  hairs,  beneath  more  densely  so 
especially  on  the  nerves,  6*5  in.  long,  3-25  in.  wide,  petiole 
slender  •  5  in.  long.  Stipules  oblong  cuspidate  •  25  in.  long. 
Inflorescence  a  dense  head  •  3  in.  through  on  a  peduncle  •  2 
in.  long  all  red-hairy.  Bracts  obcuneate  toothed,  bracteoles 
similar  but  smaller.  Flowers  pedicelled,  small  white. 
Pedicel  slender,  hairy  as  long  as  the  calyx.  Calyx  tube 
globose,  hairy,  sepals  triangular  acuminate  haii'y.  Ovary 
with  a  circular  white  disc.  Fruit  very  small,  didymous  of 
2  easily  separate  semi-globose  carpels.  Pericarp  crusta- 
ceous.     Seeds  very  many,  minute  angled. 

Kelantan  on  the  banks  of  the  Pehi  River  opposite 
Chaning  Estate  Feb.  1917. 

This  genus  lias  not  been  found  in  the  Peninsula  before. 
The  species  is  remarkable  for  its  having  apparently  alternate 
leaves,  the  second  one  of  each  pair  being  reduced  to  a  small 
stipule-like  organ,  bearing  an  inflorescence  in  its  axil,  while 
another  is  produced  in  the  axil  of  the  developed  leaf.  The 
condensed  head-like  inflorescence  is  also  unusual. 

28.  Argostemma  stipulacea,  sp.  nov. 

Whole  plant  9  in.  to  12  in.  ascending  stem  scurfy. 
Leaves  membranous  oblong  oho  vale  narrowed  lo  the 
rounded  iniequal  base,  tip  round  above,  glabrous,  dark 
green  with  grey  centre  beneath  nerves  15  pairs  and  nervules 
scurfy,  5  in.  long  2  in.  wide  ;  petiole  -25- -3  in.  long,  small 
leaf,  linear  oblong  -5  in.  long,  •  12  in.  wide.  Stipules  oblong 
with  round  tip  -5  m.  long  -2  in.  wide.  Peduncle  1  in.  long 
with  an  umbel  of  three  branches  •  5  in.  long  ;  pedicels 
slender  -1  in.  long.  Calyx  small  obconic.  Corolla  in  bud 
lanceolate,  -5  in.  across  when  open,  lobes  narrow  lanceolate 
acute. 

Kelantan  :  Kuala  Lebir. 

Allied  to  A.  rugosum,  Ridl.,  but  with  shorter  petioles 
blunt  base  to  leaf  and  much  smaller  narrow-petalled  flowers. 

29.  Argostemma  hirsutum,  sp.  nov. 

Prostrate  creeping  herb,  hairy  all  over.  Leaves  unequal 
large,  large  one  ovate  acute,  base  round  nerves  10  pairs,  fine, 
2  in.  long,  1  in.  wide  ;  petiole  •  1  in.  small  leaf  ovate  •  18  in. 
long,  acute.  Stipules  similar.  Flowers  1-2  on  a  very  hairy 
terminal  peduncle  1-2  in.  long.  Bracts  whorled,  lanceolate 
ovate,  very  hau-y  pedicels  •  25  in.  long.  Calyx  campanulate, 
lobes  lanceolate,  acute.  Corolla  •  25  in.  across  lobes  lanceo- 
late acute,  hairy. 


140  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

Kedah-Perak  boundary  .  Gunong  Bintang  (nat.  coll., 
F.M.S.  Mus.). 

Allied  to  A.  viscidum,  Ridl.,  but  with  a  long  creeping 
stem  and  ovate  leaves.    A  very  hairy  plant. 

30.  Ophiorrhiza  remotiflora,  sp.  nov. 

A  very  thin  fleshy  herb  about  6  in.  tall,  miite  glabrous 
except  the  upper  part  and  inflorescence  tninly  scurfy. 
Leaves  ovate  lanceolate  acuminate  acute  base  cuneate,  nerves 
slender  12  pairs,  7  in.  long,  3  in.  wide  or  less  ;  petiole  slender 
1  in.  long.  Inflorescence  4  in.  long  with  several  branches, 
the  lowest  3  in.  long  and  secund,  distant  flowers  ;  pedicel 
05  in.  long.  Calyx  tubular  with  lobes  linear  acute  -08  in. 
long.  Corolla  slender  tubular  •  25  in.  long  ;  lobes  short 
Janceolate.  Stamens  included.  Capsule  25  in.  wide 
slightly  indented  at  tip. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  and  Kota  Tonkat  (Evans) . 

A  remarkably  thin  fleshy  plant  with  the  flowers  wide 
spaced. 

31.  Hedyotis  pachycarpa,  sp.  nov. 

Stems  stout,  erect  obscurely  angled  over  12  in.  tall. 
Leaves  lanceolate  acuminate  acute  base,  long  narrowed, 
nerves  elevate  beneath  ascending  8  pairs,  6*25  in.  long  1*4 
in.  wide,  petiole  •  1  in.  long.  Stipules  lanceolate  oblong  with 
several  stiff"  long  bristles.  Heads  sessile  dense  axillary. 
Flowers  shortly  pedicelled.  Calyx  tube  short  lobes,  long 
lanceolate  edges  ciliate  acute.  Corolla  shorter  or  hardly 
longer  white.  Stamens  as  long  ;  anthers  linear,  oblong 
large.  Capsule  globose,  small  smooth  very  hard  crusta- 
ceous  ;  pericarp  thick.    Seeds  reniform  2-3,  black. 

Kelantan  :  Glam  Woods  near  Kota  Bahru.  Indo-China  : 
Chiooskan  (Pierre  2032). 

Near  H.  paradoxa,  Kurz  of  the  Andamans,  but  that 
has  nerveless  leaves. 

32.  Diplospora  minutiflora,  sp.  nov. 

Tree.  Leaves  thin,  glabrous  elliptic  subacute  or  bluntly 
acuminate  base  shortly  narrowed  ;  nerves  7  pairs  slightly 
elevate  4-6  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  petiole  -2  in.  long.  Cymes 
axillary  on  a  peduncle  -1  in.  long.  Flowers  green,  very 
small .:  pedicel  •  1  in.  long.  Bracts  numerous  minute  ovate. 
Calyx  campanulate  with  4  short  teeth.  Corolla  •  1  in.  long, 
tube  very  short,  lobes  oblong  blunt  valvate  4,  mouth 
glabrous.  Stamens  4,  style  very  short,  no  disc.  Ovary 
2-celled  ;  ovules  2  in  a  cell. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Woods. 

I  have  no  doubt  that  this  is  a  Diplospora  though  the 
thin  leaves,  minute  style  and  absence  of  any  hair  in  the 
corolla  mouth  are  unusual  characters. 

33.  Randia  hirsuto,  sp.  nov. 

Straggling  shrub.  Erect,  10  ft.  tall,  branches,  back  of 
leaf,  petiole  and  calyx  densely  tomentose.    Leaves  lanceolate 


1902]  Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  141 

rather  thin  acute  base,  narrowed  but  blunt ;  nerves  sunk 
above,  elevate  beneath,  4  in.  long  1-25  in.  wide  ;  petiole  -25 
in.  Stipules  linear  setaceous  hairy.  Flowers  terminal  1-3 
together,  white,  on  very  short  pedicels.  Calyx  ovoid,  very 
hairy,  -12  in.  long.  Sepals  5,  linear  acuminate  -25  in.  long. 
Corolla  tube  sparsely  pubescent,  1  •  25  in.  long,  very  narrow 
cyhndric,  lobes  narrow  oblanceolate  1  in.  long  -15  in.  wide 
narrowed  to  base,  glabrous.     Anthers  exsert. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Woods. 

I  do  not  know  anything  at  all  like  this. 

34.  Tarenna  glabra,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub,  3-4  ft.,  tall,  glabrous.  Leaves  membranous 
lanceolate  acuminate,  base  narrowed  cuneate  nerves,  about 
11  pairs  elevate  beneath  7  in.  long  3  in,  wide  ;  petiole  -S-l 
in.  long.  Stipules  short  broadly  triangular  cuspidate  '25 
in.  long.  Cyme  -75  in.  long,  very  shortly  peduncled. 
Flowers  subsessile  greenish  white.  Calyx  cup-shaped,  lobes 
very  short,  ovate.  Corolla  -4  in.  long,  tube  shorter  than 
limb,  lobes  imbricate  not  twisted,  linear  oblong  blunt, 
mouth  of  tube  inside  woolly.  Anthers  sessile  linear  with  a 
short  subulate  point.  Style  rather  stout,  upper  slightly 
dilate,  hairy.  Stigma  clubbed.  Ovary  2-celled,  ovules  2  in 
a  cell. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Forests. 

Ibis  plant  has  the  appearance  of  T.  stellalata  but  the 
corolla  is  blunt  and  quite  glabrous. 

35.  Canthium  depressinerve,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  with  pubescent  branches,  axillary  spines  -25  in. 
long.  Leaves  coriaceous  ovate  acuminate,  base  rounded  ; 
nerves  4  pairs  elevate  beneath,  sunk  above,  glabrous  above 
but  minutely  dotted,  sparsely  hairy  beneath  ;  nerves  thickly 
hairy  2-5  in.  long,  1  in.  wide,  petiole  05  in.  long.  Stipules 
broad  triangular  with  a  subulate  point.  Flowers  not  seen, 
but  apparently  the  cyme  is  small  and  not  peduncled.  Fruit 
obpyriform,  very  fleshy,  •  5  in.  long  when  dry,  pedicel  •  1  in. 
long.    Pyrene  very  hard  bony  1-seeded  ribbed  outside. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning. 

Undoubtedly  near  C.  macrocarpum,  Thw.  of  Ceylon 
but  that  has  a  pedicelled  cyme. 

36.  Ixora  Candida,  sp.  nov. 

Small  shiub  4  ft.  tall.  Leaves  lanceolate  acuminate, 
both  ends  coriaceous,  nerves  fine  elevate  beneath  11  pairs, 
bluntly  or  acutely  acuminate  3-4*5  in.  long,  '75-1  in.  wide, 
petiole  •l-'2  in.  long.  Stipules  coriaceous  lanceolate  '2  in. 
subulate,  corymbs  1'5  in.  long  lax  puberulous,  peduncle 
very  short  '5  in.,  slender.  Flowers  about  20,  white.  Calyx 
•05  in.  with  short  acute  teeth.  Corolla  tube  -75  in.  long, 
very  slender  almost  filiform,  lobes  -2  in.  linear  narrow,  in 
bud  acuminate.     Style  filiform,  long  exsert. 

Lankawi  islands  :  Dayong  Bunting  (Robinson  6219). 
Terutau  Id.  at  Telok  Wau  (Robinson). 


142  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

This  pretty  little  species  is  remarkable  for  its  very  nar- 
row coriaceous  leaves  which  do  not  dry  black  as  is  almost  in- 
variable in  white-tlowered  species,  and  in  small  lax  corymb 
of  very  slender  white  flowers  with  narrow  petals.  It  is 
perhaps  nearest  to  /.  plumea,  Ridl. 

37.  Ixora  pumila,  sp.  nov. 

Dwarf  plant  about  12  in.  tall ;  stem  pubescent.  Leaves 
obovate  to  oblanceolate,  tip  blunt  or  subacute,  base  usually 
narrowed,  blunt,  glabrous  above,  pubescent  beneath,  7  in. 
long,  3  in.  wide,  nerves  15  pairs.  Stipules  ovate 
blunt  with  a  stout  subulate  process  running  from  the 
back  13  in.  long.  Corymb  3  in.  wide  on  a  pubes- 
cent peduncle  3*5  in.  long.  Bracts  narrow,  linear  acumi- 
nate. Calyx  lobes  linear  acuminate  -12  in.  long,  much 
longer  than  the  ovary,  pubescent.  Corolla  tube  slender  1  in. 
long,  glabrous,  lobes  oblong,  all  white,  limb  -15  in.  wide. 
Stamens  exsert,  brown. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  (Evans). 

Allied  to  /.  clerodendron,  Ridl.,  but  a  dwarf  plant  with 
very  narrow  linear  sepals. 

38.  Timonius  peduncularis,  Wall.,  sub  Guettarda  pednn- 

cularis.  Cat.  6220. 

This  is  the  plant  included  under  the  name  of  T. 
jambosella,  Thw.  o^  Ceylon  by  Hooker  and  King.  It  is 
very  distinct  in  its  larger  leaves  hardly  hairy  on  the  midrib 
and  smaller,  less  hairy  flowers.  There  are  at  least  2  species 
of  this  genus  in  Ceylon  included  under  T.  jambosella. 

39.  Prismatomeris  Malayana,  sp.  nov. 

P.  albidiflora.  King  and  Gamble  Journ.  Asiat.  Soc. 
Bengal  Ixxiii,  3  (1904),  p.  90  :  not  of  Thwaites. 

The  type  of  P.  albidiflora  to  which  this  is  referred  by 
King  and  Hooker  is  a  totally  different  plant  with  a  much 
larger  shorter  corolla  and  large  calyx.  It  is  peculiar  to 
Ceylon,  The  Indian  species  also  referred  here  seems  to 
me  to  be  a  difi'erent  plant.  There  is  a  specimen  from  Ceylon 
in  Herb.  Kew  which  somewhat  resembles  P.  malayana  but 
the  flowers  are  larger  :  it  is  not  P.  albidiflora,  Thw. 

P.  malayana  occurs  in  Cambodia,  Borneo  and  Sumatra 
and  all  over  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

40-    Psychotria  vulpina,  sp.  nov. 

Shrubby  stems  red  hairy.  Leaves  membranous,  elliptic 
lanceolate  acuminate,  base  narrowed,  nerves  12  pairs  ascend- 
ing glabrous  above  densely  hairy  on  the  nerves  and  less  so 
on  the  surface,  5  in.  long,  1  •  75  in.  wide,  petiole  thickly  hairy 
•25  in.  long.  Stipules  oblong,  acuminate  hairy  outside  to 
base  •  75  in.  long,  •  25  in.  wide.  Flowers  not  seen.  Peduncle 
in  fruit  3  in.  long,  slender  hairy,  branches  1  in.  long  with 
2  or  3  secondary  branches.  Fruits  elliptic,  glabrous  shortly 
stalked  about  12  in.  long.  Seed  5,  ridged  outside,  flat 
inside. 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  143 

Kelantan  :  Kuala  Lebir. 

This  might  be  P.  multicapitata.  King  which  I  have  not 
seen  except  that  stipules  are  very  much  larger  and  the  fruits 
very  much  smaller. 

Amaracarpus,  Bl. 

This  is  a  genus  of  bushes  rarely  trees,  generally  foetid 
as  in  Saprosma  and  Mephitidia  with  small  leaves  rather 
crowded,  small  tubular  flowers  axillary  or  terminal,  one  or 
2  together.  Fruit  generally  blue,  pulpy  one  or  two  seeded, 
crowned  by  the  enlarged  calyx  lobes.  Some  of  the  species 
have  been  put  into  Saprosma,  and  I  think  Neoschimpera, 
Ilemsl.,  a  Seychelles  plant  is  the  same  genus.  The  species 
known  to  me  are  Amaracarpus  pubescens  Bi.,  Java  :  A. 
misrophijllus  Miq.,  Celebes:  A.  saxicola  Saprosma 
saxicola,  Ridl.  (Journ.  Straits  Branch  Royal  Asiat.  Soc.  No. 
61,  1912,  p.  22),  in  limestone  rocks  at  Kamuning,  Perak  :  A. 
nativitatis  Bak.  fil.,  Christmas  island. 

41.  Amaracarpus  caudatus,  sp.  nov. 

Small  glabrous  foetid  tree.  Leaves  ovate  lanceolate 
caudate  mucronulate,  base  shortly  cuneate  and  obscurely 
unequal  thin  coriaceous,  nerves  fine  6-8  pairs,  inarching, 
nervules  and  reticulations  nearly  as  prominent  '2  in.  long, 
•5- -75  in.  wide,  petiole  05  in.  long  Stipules  very  small 
with  1  point.  Flowers  in  axillary  pairs  sessile.  Calyx 
small  short,  teeth  acute  4  in.  long.  Corolla  white  cylindric 
tubular  -25  in.  long,  lobes  short  blunt,  4.  Stamen  4.  Ovary 
3-celled.  Fruit  blue  1-2  seeded  -25  in.  long.  Seeds  plano- 
convex. 

Perak  ;  Birch's  Hill,  Taiping  Hills  (Wray  670) . 

A  small  tree  with  foetid  smell  like  carbon  bisulphide. 
Flowers  white.     Fruit  blue.     August  1885. 

42.  Lasianthus  Kurzii,  Hook.  fil. 

This  was  based  on  a  plant  collected  by  Wallich  in 
Burmah,  No.  8310,  8311,  of  his  collections.  No.  8311  was 
written  up  by  him  Penang  ?  and  on  the  strength  of  this 
has  got  into  our  Flora  :  I  have  not  seen  any  specimen  from 
the  Malay  Peninsula.  Allied  to  it,  however,  is  a  species 
described  by  King  and  Gamble  in  the  "  Materials  "  for  a 
flora  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  as  Kurzii  but  they  seem  doubt- 
ful about  it.  It  is  a  native  of  Singapore  :  Garden  jungle 
(Ridley  140)  and  Pasir  Panjang.  It  seems  to  me  abundantly 
distinct  in  its  much  more  hairy  habit,  the  branches  are 
appressed  yellow-hairy,  the  inflorescence  and  leaves  also 
very  hairy.  The  Burmese  plant  though  not  glabrous  has 
none  of  this  long  yellow  appressed  hair,  and  the  leaves 
appear  to  have  been  thinner  in  texture. 

43.  For  the  Singapore  plant  as  described  by  King  and 

Gamble  (Journ.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal,  Ixxiii,  2  (1904), 

p.  119)  I  pro])ose  the  name  of  Lasianliius  chryseus, 

Ridl. 

Allied  to  this  plant  is  another  I  recently  found  at  Tebong 

in  Malacca,  which  differs  in  the  more  acuminate  thin  leaves, 


144  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

the  midrib  of  which  above  is  hairy  and  the  much  longer 
petiole.    It  also  possesses  distinct  stipule-like  bracts. 

44.  Lasianthus  mollis,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  with  slender  branches  densely  covered  with 
appressed  yellow  hairs.  Leaves  membranous  lanceolate 
acuminate,  base  narrowed  acuminate  above  glabrous  except 
the  midrib  covered  with  yellow  hair  beneath  the  nerves 
6-7  pairs  and  nervules  yellow,  hairy  3*5  in.  long,  1*25  in. 
wide,  petioles  slender  •  25  in.  long,  hairy.  Stipules  triangular 
lanceolate  acuminate.  Cymes  sessile  few  flowered,  much 
shorter  than  the  petiole.  Bracts  lanceolate  acuminate,  hairy. 
Flowers  sessile  2-3  in.  a  cyme  white.  Calyx  lobes  short 
lanceolate,  hairy.  Corolla  much  longer  -15  in.  long, 
glabrous,  tube  cylindric  dilate  at  top,  lobes  4,  recurved  ovate 
blunt,  much  shorter.     Stamens  exsert  4. 

Malacca  :  Tebong  (in  Woods),  Jan.  1917. 

45.  Lasianthus  velutinus,  sp.  nov. 

Shrub  3  ft.  tall,  densely  covered  with  soft  yellowish 
spreading  hairs,  except  the  upper  side  of  the  leaves.  Leaves 
obovate  to  elliptic,  shortly  acuminate,  base  narrowed 
cuneate  nerves  elevate  beneath  8  pairs,  strongly  hairy  4-6*5 
in.  long,  2-2*75  in.  wide,  petiole  15  in.  long.  Stipules 
ovate.  Cymes  acuminate  hairy  sessile  as  long  as  petiole 
densely  hairy.  Bracts  lanceolate  persistent  '15  in.  long. 
Calyx  short,  sessile,  lobes  lanceolate  acuminate,  hairy. 
Corolla  not  seen.  Fruit  when  dry  *  2  in.  long  obovoid  hairy, 
crowned  by  the  hairy  sepals. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Woods. 

This  is  near  L.  chryseus  Ridl.  and  L.  politus  Ridl.  but 
the  leaves  are  more  obovate  and  thin. 

COMPOSITAE. 

46.  Vernonia  rupicola,  sp.  nov. 

Herb,  base  of  stem  woody  glabrous  except  the  young 
shoots  which  are  mealy  tomentose.  Leaves  membranous 
lanceolate  obscurely  bluntly  serrate  or  nearly  entire  mostly 
at  base  of  stem  subacute  long  narrowed  to  the  winged  petiole 
5  in.  long,  2  in.  wide  or  less.  Cymes  of  heads  axillary  2-3 
heads  together  or  terminal,  peduncles  1*25  in.  long.  Heads 
in  fruit  -25  in.  wide  *5  in.  long.  Bracts  lanceolate 
mucronate  chaffy  with  numerous  ones  much  smaller  at  base. 
Pappus  white  -2  in.  long,  achenes  narrow,  ribbed  hairy, 
oblong. 

On  rocks  at  Pulau  Butang,  Butang  Ids.  near  Langkawi 
Ids.  (Ridley  No.  15  683).  Unfortunately  this  plant  was 
almost  dried  up  and  quite  out  of  flower. 

Vernonia  arborea.  King  includes  2  species  neither  being 
the  original  south  Indian  species  of  Buchanan  Hamilton  ; 
one  is  V.  javanicoy  DC,  the  other  a  taller  glabrous  tree  is 
the  Conyza  acuminata,  Wallich.  which  I  call  now  V. 
Wallichii  (postea). 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  145 

47.  Vernonia  javanica,  DC, 

Prodr.  V.  21,  is  a  low  rather  stout  branching  tree 
iaranches  tomentose.  The  leaves  elliptic  base  round  tomen- 
tose  beneath  3-4  in.  long,  1  •  75  to  2  in.  wide,  petiole  •  25  in. 
long  tomentose.  Panicle  6  in.  long  and  wide  tomentose. 
Bracts  ciliate. 

Occurs  in  open  country  in  Singapore,  Malacca,  Pahang, 
Selangor,  the  Bindings  and  Penang.  Also  in  Java  and 
Borneo. 

48.  Vernonia  Wallichii,  sp.  nou. 

An  erect  more  slender  tall  tree  60  ft.  tall.  Leaves 
thinner  elliptic  acuminate  base  narrowed  quite  glabrous  •  3 
to  6  in.  long,  1-5  to  3  in.  wide,  petiole  slender  '5  in.  long 
glabrous.  Panicle  7  in.  long  and  wide  tomentose.  Bracts 
not  ciliate. 

Common  in  forests  all  over  the  Peninsula.  Also  in 
Siam  and  Borneo. 


ERICACEAE. 

49.  Diplycosia  microphylla,  Becc. 

The  Vaccinium  microphyllum.  King  and  Gamble  is  a 
very  distinct  little  plant  occurring  on  Mount  Ophir  and 
Kedah  Peak  in  the  Peninsula  and  Matang  in  Borneo.  The 
plants  referred  to  it  by  King  and  Gamble  from  Perak  are 
quite  distinct,  but  the  specimens  I  have  seen  are  poor. 

50.  Diplycosia  elliptica,  sp.  nov. 

Epiphyte,  5-8  ft.  long,  branches  pubescent,  not  bristly. 
Leaves  entire,  elliptic  rounded  at  both  ends,  with  no  or  very 
few  bristles  at  the  tip  on  the  edge  ;  nerves  one  pair  at  base 
running  nearly  the  whole  length  of  the  leaf,  sunk  above 
invisible  beneath  -5- '75  in  long,  '2- -5  in.  wide;  petiole 
very  short.  Pedicel  of  solitary  axillary  flower  -05  in.  long. 
Calyx  lobes  ovate  acute.  Corolla  campanulate,  white  or 
pale  green. 

Perak  :  Larut  Hills  at  3,000  to  4,000  ft.  (Kunstler  6390), 
Gunong  Batu  Putih  at  3,400  ft.  (Wray  470). 

D.  microphylla  has  much  closer  set  smaller  serrate 
leaves  with  bristles  on  the  serrations  and  the  stem  bristly. 
The  calyx  lobes  are  much  less  deeply  cut. 

51.  Diplycosia  cordifolia,  sp.  nov. 

Branches  slender,  4  angled  red,  tomentose.  Leaves 
entire  ovate  cordate  minutely,  base  broad  round  edge  sparse- 
ly bristly  nerves  2,  sunk  above  •  5  in.  long  •  4  in.  wide,  petiole 
very  short.  Peduncle  decurved  -l  in.  long.  The  flowers 
are  all  fallen  in  my  specimen. 

Pahang  :  Wray's  Camp,  Gunong  Tahan,  3,300  ft. 


146  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

52.  Diplycosia  erythrina,  King  and  Gamble  is  Vaccinium 

erythrimim.  Hook,  fil.,  Bot.  Mag.  t.  5688. 

It  is  not  a  Diplycosia  but  a  Vaccinium  closely  allied 
ir  not  identical  with  V.  Waringiaefolium  of  Sumatra  and 
Java.  Wray's  Perak  specimen  at  Kew  is  very  incomplete. 
*'  Gunong  Bubu.  Stunted  tree,  fruit  claret-coloured  3816." 
It  is  possible  it  may  be  Vaccinium  erythrinum  which  does 
have  a  few  solitary  axillary  flowers  as  this  does,  besides 
the  long  showy  terminal  racemes,  which  are  missing  in 
Wray's  specimen,  I  am  however,  not  at  all  certain  of  its 
identity. 

APOCYNACEAE. 

53.  Melodinus  cymosus,  sp.  nov. 

Leaves  thin,  coriaceous  chartaceous,  elliptic  abruptly 
blunt  cuspidate  base,  shortly  cuneate,  nerves  about  40  pairs, 
very  slender  parallel,  secondary  nerves  as  prominent  as 
main  nerves  4-25  in.  long,  2  in.  wide,  petiole  -6  in.  long. 
Cymes  lax,  few  flowered,  spreading,  peduncle  -5  in.  long, 
cyme  '75  in.  long.  Bracts  minute  lanceolate  acute,  pedicels 
•12  in.  long.  Flowers  -25  in.  long,  dull  yellow.  Calyx- 
lobes  5  rounded.  Corolla  tube  dilate  at  base,  narrowed 
upwards  lobes  ovate  5,  entire.  Scales  oblong  forked. 
Anthers  small  elliptic  with  a  short  apiculus.  Style  short 
and  stout. 

Malacca.     Selangor  forest  (Burkill  789) 

"  Flowers  dull  yellow,  face  in  a  variety  of  ways,  found 
open  at  midday,  April  7,  1915. 

Distinct  in  its  lax  subterminal  cymes.  The  flowers 
were  in  a  poor  condition,  every  one  I  examined  having  been 
infested  by  a  dipterous  larva,  but  I  cannot  find  anything  like 
it. 

ASCLEPIADACEAE. 

54.  Dischidia  viridiflora,  sp.  nov. 

Long  slender  creeping  glabrous  plant  rooting  at  distant 
points.  Leaves  fleshy  lanceolate  acuminate  blunt  base 
narrow,  nerves  invisible,  -75  in.  long,  '25  in.  wide,  petiole 
•1  in.  long.  Peduncle  -15  in.  long,  raceme  •!  in.  long. 
Flower  -15  in.  long,  pedicel  very  short.  Sepals  very  short 
lanceolate  linear  blunt.  Corolla  flask-shaped,  base  wide 
gradually  narrowed  to  the  tip,  green  turning  pink,  glabrous 
within,  lobes  short,  subacute.  Corona  0.  Staminal  column 
stout,  wings  rather  large  coriaceous  yellowish. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning. 

As  in  D.  parviflora,  Ridl.,  I  am  quite  unable  to  see  any 
trace  of  the  corona. 

55.  Dischidia  ericaeflora,  sp.  nov. 

Long  climber  with  internodes  over  4  in.  long.  Leaves 
fleshy  lanceolate  or  ovate  lanceolate  acuminate  blunt, 
base    round    nerves    faint     2    pairs    from     the     base, 


I 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  147 

2  25  in.  long  1  in.  wide  at  base.  Racemes  2  divaricate 
from  the  top  of  a  peduncle  '25  in.  long,  and  elongated  to 
•5  in.  Bracts  round  very  numerous  papery.  Flowers 
apparently  white,  subglobose  campanulate  -15  in.  long, 
pedicel  shorter.  Calyx  lobes  ovate  blunt.  Corolla  conic, 
swollen  at  base,  globose,  narrowed  upwards,  lobes  ovate 
acute  deep  cleft  glabrous  within.  Corolla  scales  with  a 
rather  long  slender  pedicel,  the  top  subovate  with  two  long 
narrow  curved  arms  nearly  as  long  as  the  pedicel.  Stamina! 
column  short,  blunt  conic,  anther  wings  fleshy  rather 
narrow,  pollinia  oblong,  ellipsoid,  carrier  minute. 

Kedah-Perak  Boundary  :  Gunong  Bintang  (nat.  coll. 
F.M.S.  Mus.). 

MYRSINEAE. 

56.  Maesa  ovocarpa,  sp.  nov. 

A  large  shrub,  glabrous.  Leaves  ovate  blunt  or  sharply 
acuminate  edge  dentate  thin  textured,  nerves  8  pairs 
beneath  pale  6  in.  long,  4  in.  wide,  petiole  1  in.  long.  In- 
florescence of  several  slender  racemes  1-5  in.  long  on  a 
very  short  peduncle.  Flowers  rather  distant,  pedicel  short. 
Sepals  4,  ovate  denticulate,  not  striate  or  glandular.  Fruit 
ovoid  stalked,  narrowed  to  base  •  2  in.  long,  crowned  by  the 
enlarged  sepals. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning. 

Allied  to  M.  striata,  but  with  very  different  fruits. 

57.  Maesa  arborea,  sp.  nov. 

Small  tree.  Leaves  coriaceous  smooth,  ovate  acumi- 
nate, base  round  edge  obscurely  undulate,  nerves  10  pairs 
slightly  elevate  4-7  in.  long,  2-3  in.  wide,  petiole  -5  in. 
Panicles  thyrsoid  3-4  in.  long,  branches  -5  in.  long,  densely 
floriferous.  Flowers  white,  very  shortly  pedicelled,  pedicels 
much  shorter  than  caljrx,  numerous  crowded.  Sepals  5, 
denticulate  striate  ovate.  Petals  5  round.  Stamens  adnate 
to  corolla  base.     Style  short  and  stout. 

Kelantan  :  Woods  on  the  Pehi  River,  Chaning. 

58.  Maesa  striata  var.  dissitiflora,  var.  nov. 

Shrub.  Leaves  thin,  membranous  elliptic  acuminate, 
base  narrowed,  blunt  edges  undulate  to  bluntly  serrate, 
nerves  slender  -5  in.  long.  Inflorescence  of  2  or  3,  very 
slender,  fascicled  racemes  2  in.  long  with  remote  flowers 
on  slender  pedicels  •  1  in.  long,  much  longer  than  the  calyx. 
Sepals  5,  lanceolate,  acute,  3  ribbed,  not  toothed.  Petals 
oblong,  rounded.     Stamens  adnate  near  the  base. 

Kelantan  :  Kuala  Lebir. 

OLEACEAE. 

59.  Jasminum  arenarium^  sp.  .lov. 

Slender  climber  with  pubescent  branches  Leaves 
lanceolate  acuminate,  base  round,  velvety  beneath  when 


148  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

j'oung,  glabrous  when  adult,  membranous,  nerves  4-5  pairs, 
slender,  3  in.  long,  1'25  in.  wide.  Cymes  on  branch  ends 
of  5  flowers  subtended  by  2  small  leaves.  Calyx  cup-shaped 
hairy,  lobes  subulate,  longer  than  the  tube,  appressed  hairy, 
•  25  in.  long.  Corolla  glabrous,  tube  1  in.  long,  lobes  •  4  in. 
long,  ovate,  oblong,  acute  8. 

Kelantan  :  Kota  Bharu.    Feb.  1917. 

This  is  allied  to  J.  syringaefolium,  Wall,  of  Tenasserim 
but  the  flowers  are  much  larger. 

60.  Jasminum  Evansii,  sp.  nav. 

Chmber  with  slender  tomentose ,  branches.  Leaves 
lanceolate  acuminate,  base  round,  sparsely  dotted  with  hairs 
above,  midrib  sunk,  pubescent  beneath  more  thickly  hairy, 
midrib  tomentose  2-25  in.  long,  1  in.  wide  ;  nerves  4  pairs, 
petiole  -2  in.  long,  tomentose.  Cymes  on  short  lateral 
branches  '5  in.  long.  Bracts  small,  linear.  Pedicels  1  m. 
long.  Calyx  cup-shaped  with  subulate  points  as  long  as 
tube  '12  in.  long,  pubescent.  Corolla  glabrous,  tube  slender 
•8  in.  long  ;  lobes  8,  rather  narrow,  linear,  oblong,  acute 
•35  in.  long.    Fruit  '4  in.  long,  didymous,  elhpsoid. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  (Evans). 

Nearest  to  J.  HorsfieldiU  Miq.  of  Banka  Id.,  but  the 
leaves  thinner,  less  densely  hairy  and  with  more  nerves. 

61.  Olea  penangiana,  sp.  nov. 

Small  tree.  Young  branches  pubesceht.  Leaves  entire, 
coriaceous,  lanceolate  or  oblong  lanceolate  acuminate,  base 
shortly  cuneate  ;  nerves  8-10  pairs,  obscure,  midrib  pro- 
minent 3 '5-4 -5  in.  long,  1-2  in.  wide.  Cymes  in  spread- 
ing axillary  and  terminal  panicles  6  in.  long,  umbellate. 
Bracts  leafy,  oblong  up  to  1*5  in.  long.  Calyx  pubescent, 
lobes  4,  round.  Corolla  campanulate  '15  in.  long,  lobes 
round. 

Penang  :  Penara  Bukit  and  Telok  Bahang  (Curtis) . 

This  plant  has  been  referred  by  King  to  Wallich*s  O. 
dentata  an  Amherst  plant  with  spiny-toothed  leaves  and 
much  more  conspicuous  nerves.  It  is  nearer  O.  maritima 
but  the  leaves  are  larger  and  diff"erent  in  shape  and  the 
flowers  conspicuously  larger. 

GESNERIACEAE. 

62.  Boea  minutiflora,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  rather  stout,  4  in.  long,  densely  clothed  with  long 
soft,  white  hairs  above.  Leaves  thin,  membranous,  ovate 
or  ovate  lanceolate,  blunt  acuminate,  base  decurrent  on 
petiole,  edge  coarsely  serrate,  sparsely  hairy  with  long  soft 
hairs  on  both  sides,  densely  hairy  on  nerves  beneath  and 
edge  5  in.  long,  4  in.  wide  or  less,  petiole  1  •  5  in.  long,  densely 
soft,  white,  hairy.  Panicles  2-3  in.  wide,  very  lax  on  a 
peduncle  3  in.  long,  hairy,  branches  very  slender,  numerous. 
Pedicels  longer  than  the  flowers.  Calyx  lobes  linear,  lanceo- 
late as  long  as  corolla  tube.     Corolla  white    08  in.  long, 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &Rare  Malayan  Plants.  149 

2  lipped,  lower  lip  loiiger  than  recurved  uppr  r  one,  lobes 
broad,  round.  Stamens  2  anthers  ellipsoid,  large.  Style 
longer  than  corolla.  Ovary  ovoid.  Capsule  15  in.  long, 
acute,  spirally  twisted. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  (Evans) . 

This  soft,  woolly  plant  has  I  think,  the  smallest  flowers 
of  any  in  the  Order.  It  is  nearest  perhaps  to  B.  paruiflora^ 
Ridl. 

63.  Chirita  parvula,  sp.  nov. 

Slender  dwarf  herb,  6  in.  tall,  sparsely  hairy.  Leaves 
thin  membranous,  ovate,  lanceolate  entire,  acute  base 
decurrent,  shortly  hairy  all  over,  3  in.  long,  1*5  in.  wide, 
petiole  1  in.  long.  Flowers  solitary  or  paired  axillary, 
pedicels  hairy  1  in.  long.  Calyx  '4  in.  long,  lobes  narrow, 
lanceolate  acuminate,  hairy.  Corolla  light  -vdolet,  tube 
cylindric  -5  in.  long  dilate  above  limb  -4  in.  wide  unequally 
bilobed.  Capsule  very  narrow,  cylindric  acuminate  1-5 
in.  long. 

Pahang  :  Kota  Tongkat,  10th  mile  Benta-Kuantan  road 
(Evans) . 

Closely  allied  to  C.  viola,  Ridl.,  but  differing  in  its 
hairiness  and  the  long-tubed  corolla  and  the  much  longer 
hairy  calyx. 

SCROPHULARIACEAE. 

64.  Torenia  bimaculata,  sp.  nov. 

Branched  herb  12  in.  tall ;  stems  4-angled,  glabrous 
except  the  hairy  young  parts.  Leaves  ovate,  acute,  base 
decurrent  on  petiole  often  oblique  seri'ate,  nT-rves  6  pairs, 
elevate  and  almost  winged  beneath,  1  in.  long  -5  in.  wide  ; 
petiole  -25  in.  long.  Flowers  1-5-in  a  terminal  umbel  with 
narrow  linear  acuminate  bracts  •  25  in.  long  ;  pedicels  •  5  in. 
long.  Calyx  ellipsoid  decurrent  on  pedicel  distinctly  winged, 
lobes  acuminate  subulate  -5  in.  long,  -25  in.  wide,  hairy  on 
the  edges  at  tip.  Corolla-tube  slender,  as  long  as  calyx  ; 
limb  about  -25  in.  across,  bilabiate  pale  blue  with  a  dark 
purple  spot  on  each  side  of  flower  lip,  mouth  of  tube  yellow 
inside.     Calyx  in  fruit  wider. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  on  river  banks,  Feb.  1917. 

A  very  similar  plant  to  this  I  found  at  Angkor  Wat  in 
Cambodia,  but  the  leaves  in  that  are  rounded  at  base  and 
the  calyx  more  narrowly  winged.  I  cannot  match  either 
with  any  of  Bonati's  descriptions  in  Bull.  Soc.  France  Iv.  p. 
512.  T.  bimaculata  in  colouring  resembles  the  well-known 
garden  plant  T.  Foiirnieri  of  Siam  but  is  much  more 
branched  and  the  flowers  are  smaller. 

ACANTHACEAE. 

65.  Leda  rubrolutea,  sp.  nov. 

A  creeping,  ascending  slender  herb  about  6  in.  tall, 
pubescent.     Leaves   few   in   distant   equal   pairs,    elliptic 


150  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

lanceolate  or  lanceolate  acuminate,  blunt ;  base  narrowed, 
herbaceous,  scurfy  pubescent  beneath,  with  many  small 
raphides  '2-3  in.  long,  '6-1  in.  wide  ;  petiole  slender  -2  in. 
long.  Raceme  terminal,  4  in.  long  of  about  10  rather  distant 
sessile  solitary  or  paired  flowers.  Bracts  minute  lanceolate. 
Sepals  linear  acuminate,  glabrous.  Corolla  -25  in.  long, 
glabrous,  lips  equilong,  lower  broader  with  short  lobes  ; 
upper  lobe  and  tube  brown-red  with  two  pale  stripes,  lower 
lobe  yellow.  Stamens  2,  filament  glabrous.  Anther  cells 
ellipsoid,  muticous  unequally  placed.  Capsule  with  long 
narrow  base  and  top  clubbed  acute,  -5  in.  long  containing 
2  seeds. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Woods. 

66.  Justicia  ovalis,  sp.  nov. 

Herb  puberulous  with  a  line  of  hairs  running  along  the 
stem,  stem  18  in.  tall.  Leaves  in  distant  pairs  ovate  acumi- 
nate, subcuspidate,  blunt,  base  narrowed  ;  nerves  6-7  pairs, 
4*5-5  in.  long,  2-3  in.  wide,  petiole  slender  -5  in.  long. 
Raceme  terminal,  slender,  puberulous  peduncle  6  in.  long. 
Flowers  few.  Sepals  lanceolate  setaceous  '1  in.  long. 
Corolla  '3  in.  long  puberulous,  rather  stout.  Upper  lip 
short,  oblong,  blunt,  lower  with  2  fleshy  ridges  and  veined 
transversely  between,  lobes  short,  oblong,  central  one  ovate. 
Stamens  2,  shorter  than  corolla.  Anther  cells  not  parallel 
elliptic,  one  with  a  short  blunt  white  process  at  base. 

Pulau  Tiuman  :  Joara  Bay  (Burkill  970) . 

Burkill  refers  this  to  Leda  ohouata  and  it  has  a  Leda- 
like  habit,  but  the  leaves  are  not  succulent  as  in  that  species 
and  the  anther  and  lip  are  those  of  Justicia. 

VERBENACEAE.  * 

67.  Callicarpa  furfuracea,  sp.  nov. 

Branches  brown,  scurfy.  Leaves  membranous  oblong, 
acuminate,  dentate  in  upper  part ;  base  truncate  ;  nerves  7 
pairs  with  reticulations  conspicuous  beneath,  above  smooth 
nerves  sunk,  midrib  scurfy,  beneath  pale,  whitish  nerves, 
nervules  and  reticulations  brown  scurfy  5  in.  long,  2*75  in. 
wide,  petiole  '5  in.  long.  Cymes  paniculate  terminal  1  in. 
or  more  long,  many  flowered,  brown  scurfy.  Pedicels  •  05 
in.  long  with  calyx  and  corolla  white  tomentose.  Calyx  cup- 
shaped,  entire.  Corolla  -l  in.  long,  regular  lobes  4,  short 
ovate,  blunt.  Stamens  4,  filaments  from  corolla  base 
slender,  anthers  large  oblong  just  exsert. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  (Evans). 

This  is  of  the  section  of  C.  arborea,  but  distinguished 
by  its  brown  fur  and  leaves  white  beneath  with  brown, 
scurfy  reticulations. 

Avicennia. 

The  Asiatic  Avicennias  have  been  very  much  confused. 
Indeed  in  most  works,  they  are  reduced  to  2  species  only, 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  151 

A.  officinalis,  and  ^4.  alba.    In  the  field  however,  it  is  clear 
that  there  are  more  than  these  2  species. 

68.  Avicennia  officinalis,  L. 

Is  a  common  species  with  obovatc  round  tipped  leaves, 
very  nearly  glabrous,  and  A.  alba  has  lanceolate  p>ointed 
leaves  which  dry  black  and  are  white  beneath.  Griffith  des- 
cribed in  Notul.  iv,  p.  189,  a  distinct  plant  A.  intermedia 
which  appears  (as  Griffith  suggests)  to  be  a  hybrid  between 
these  two  species.  It  has  obovate  to  lanceolate  leaves,  blunt, 
pale  puberulous  beneath.  Fruit  rather  small,  cordate  ovoid, 
glaucous.  It  occurs  at  Malacca,  Pulau  Jawa  (Griffith). 
Selangor,  Klang  (Watson).  Dindings,  Pangkor  (Scorte- 
chini) . 

69.  Avicennia  sphaerocarpa,  Stapf  (ined) . 

Is  a  small  tree.  Leaves  elliptic  narrowed  to  the  tip  or 
round,  the  base  narrowed,  whitish  beneath,  3  in.  long,  1-5 
in.  wide,  petiole  winged  above  '25  in.  long.  Inflorescence 
axillary  of  2-3  or  more  flowers,  terminal  on  peduncles  •  30- 
•75  in.  long,  pubescent.  Calyx  lobes  oblong  ciliate,  silky 
•  15  in.  long.  Corolla  I  have  not  seen.  Fruit  ovoid,  round 
subglobose,  not  beaked  •  75  in.  long. 

This  so  far  as  I  know  only  occurs  in  the  Malay  Penin- 
sula in  Penang  where  Curtis  collected  it  at  Sungai  Penang  ; 
but  it  also  occurs  in  Siam,  the  Philippines  and  China.  It  is 
a  very  distinct  plant  in  the  small  round  not  beaked  fruit  and 
smaller  leaves. 

70.  Avicennia  lanata,  sp.  nov. 

Is  a  new  and  distinct  species,  to  which  my  attention 
was  called  by  Mr.  J.  G.  Watson,  who  has  been  studying  the 
species  of  Avicennia  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  and  made 
careful  notes  of  the  differences  in  the  species.  To  a  certain 
extent  it  has  the  habit  of  A.  officinalis,  but  branches  and 
leaves  beneath  are  distinctly  yellow  tomentose.  I  take  the 
description  below  mainly  from  his  notes. 

A  large  tree.  Leaves  obovate  blunt  closely  yellow 
tomentose  beneath,  glabrous,  shining  above,  ners'es  4  pairs, 
3  in.  long  1  •  25  in.  wide  ;  petiole  wrinkled,  pubescent  •  5  in. 
long.  Flowers  in  cymose  heads,  in  threes  in  a  compound 
cyme,  axillary  peduncle  "5- -75  in.  long,  yellowish,  tomen- 
tose. Bracts  densely  tomentose.  Calyx-lobes  tomentose 
outside.  Corolla  glabrous  inside,  densely  hairy  outside. 
Anthers  dorsifixed  elliptic  filaments  about  the  same  length. 
Ovary  light  green,  glabrous  but  surrounded  at  the  base  by 
dense  tomentum.  Style  bifid,  very  short,  brown,  lobes 
erect.    Fruit  ovoid  not  beaked  •  5  in.  long  tomentose. 

Singapore  :  River  Valley  Road  (BurkiD  and  Watson 
No.  3793,  3797).    Pahang,  Kuantan  :  (Watson  2767). 

Mr.  Watson  notes  that  while  Singapore  specimens 
attain  a  height  of  80  ft.,  trees  from  the  coast  of  Pahang 
are  small  and  stunted  and  there  he  has  never  met  an  example 


jl52  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.          [Vol.  X, 

more  than  20  ft.  high.    The  species  does  not  seem  to  occur 
m  Selangor. 

I  would  add  that  the  cymes  are  2-2*5  in.  long.  The 
corolla  lobes  strongly  decurved  and  the  whole  flower  very 
fragrant.  In  A.  officinalis  the  calyx  lobes  are  spreading 
but  not  recurved,  the  filaments  much  longer  than  the  anthers 
and  the  style  long  and  slender.  The  flowers  have  an  un- 
nleasant  smell. 


LAURACEAE. 

71.  Litsea  glabrifolia,  sp.  nov. 

A  glabrous  tree.  Leaves  alternate,  thinly  coriaceous 
glaucescent  beneath,  oblong  or  oblong-lanceolate,  shortly 
narrowed  at  the  broad  base,  and  blunt  at  tip,  nerves  10  pairs, 
elevate  beneath,  7-8  in.  long,  3  in.  wide,  petiole  -5  in.  long. 
Umbellules  in  short  stout  racemes,  -1  in.- -2  in.  long, 
axillary.  Peduncles  silky  -2  in.  long.  Involucre  of  4  round 
boat-shaped  bracts,  silky  •  15  in.  long.  Flowers  about  7, 
pedicelled  .-25  in.  long  and  as  wide,  silky,  lobes  linear, 
oblong  as  long  as  the  pedicels.  Stamens  12,  filaments  long, 
slender,  hairy,  innermost  three  with  oblong  stipitate  glands. 
Pistillode  cylindric  with  a  2  or  3-lobed  recurved  stigma. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  (Evans). 

This  has  somewhat  the  habit  of  L.  polyantha  but  the 
leaves  are  rather  thinner  and  quite  glabrous,  the  umbels 
much  larger  and  there  is  a  distinct  pistillode.  I  have  only 
seen  the  male  plant. 

72.  Litsea  acrantha,  sp.  nov. 

Branches  and  petioles  shortly  rough,  setose  hairy. 
Leaves  alternate  coriaceous,  lanceolate  acuminate,  base 
narrow,  glabrous  except  the  midrib  and  nerves  beneath 
covered  with  pale  appressed  bristles,  nerves  7  pairs  elevate 
beneath  ;  nervules  horizontal  parallel,  general  surface 
areolate  3-3-5  in.  long,  1-5  in.  wide  ;  petiole  "25  in.  long. 
Umbels  one  or  more  pseudolerminal  sessile  on  a  peduncle, 
silky  -25  in.  long,  -3  in.  across  when  expanded.  Involucral 
bracts  4,  ovate,  silky,  rather  thin.  Flowers  about  4,  pedicels 
silky,  lobes  3,  ovate  round  spathulate,  3  inner  linear  oblong, 
silky.  Stamens  7,  filaments  slender,  glabrous  with  no 
glands.  Anther  oblong  4-celled.  Pistillode  small  conic. 
Style  long  but  shorter  than  the  perianth  with  three  recurved 
stigmas. 

Kedah-Perak  boundary:  Gunong  Bintang  (nat.  coll. 
F.M.S.  Mus.). 

This  has  somewhat  the  appearance  of  an  Actinodaphne^ 
but  the  leaves  are  not  whorled,  the  stamens  in  two  flowers 
examined  were  7  in  number.  It  is  quite  unlike  any  Litsea 
known  to  me  in  the  falsely  terminal  flowers. 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  Sz  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  153 

ORCHiDEAE. 

73.  Ascochilus  capricornis,  sp.  nov. 

Stems  tufted,  branched  4  in.  tall.  Leaves  rigid  terete 
grooved  above  recurred,  blunt,  1  in.  long,  sheaths  '2  in.  long 
strongly  ribbed  and  cancellate  with  transverse  bars. 
Racemes  2-2-5  in.  long,  lax.  Bracts  ovate  sheathing 
persistent.  Pedicels  -25  in.  long.  Flowers  -25  in.  wide. 
Sepals  oblong,  rounded,  upper  one  magenta,  laterals  falcate, 
broad  brownish  green  mottled  red.  Petals  oblong,  blunt  as 
long  as  upper  sepal.  Lip  shortly  clawed  side  lobes  erect 
triangular,  midlobe  porrect  much  longer  triangular  lanceo- 
late acuminate,  spur  scrotiform,  an  oblong  blunt  fleshy 
callus  from  the  back  over  the  mouth  of  the  spur.  Column 
tall,  winged  above. 

Pahang  r'Gunong  Senyum  (Evans). 

This  remarkable  species  has  stiff  curved  terete  leaves 
like  the  horn  of  an  Ibex,  and  for  the  genus  rather  large 
flowers. 

74.  Taeniophyllum  culiciferum,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  '5  in.  long,  roots  numerous  very  slender,  9  in. 
or  less.  Peduncle  filiform  1  in.  long,  raceme  •  12-*  15  in. 
long,  bracts  distichous,  very  small  about  15.  Pedicel 
filiform  '15  in.  long.  Flowers  '12  in.  long,  pale  yellow- 
Sepals  and  petals  sub-similar,  lanceolate  linear  acuminate 
acute,  lip  lanceolate  acuminate  nearly  as  long  and  broader, 
spur  flask-shaped,  narrowed  at  base,  then  ellipsoid,  blunt 
nearly  as  long  as  the  pedicel.     Fruit  cylindric  •  5  in.  long. 

Pahang  :  Rumpin  river  mouth  (Evans) .  Kelantan  : 
Chaning  Woods  (Ridley) . 

Resembing  T.  mac/orrhizum,  Ridl.  in  habit,  but  with 
very  much  smaller  flowers  with  narrow  petals,  sepals  and 
lip. 

ZINGIBERACEAE. 

75.  Amomum  xanthoglossum,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  tall,  rather  Blender,  glabrous.  Leaves  oblong, 
lanceolate,  cuspidate,  narrowed  to  base,  glabrous  15  in. 
long,  3  in.  wide,  petiole  slender  -5  in.  long  :  ligule  shorter 
round  at  tip  entire.  Spike  obconic  shortly  peduncled,  3  in. 
long,  glabrous.  Bracts  smooth,  chartaceous  oblong,  tip 
round,  upper  ones  with  a  short  mucro,  lower  ones  1  in. 
long  -6  in.  wide.  Calyx  tubular,  truncate,  glabrous  -5  in. 
long.  Corolla  tube  cylindric  silky  hairy  1  in.  long,  lobes 
oblong  white.  Lip  broad  obovate,  clawed,  1  in.  wide,  edge 
rnlire  yellow  inside,  veined  red  at  base.  Stamens  1  in.  long, 
no  crest,  but  arms  elongate,  curved,  -2  in.  long,  linear. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Woods. 

76.  Amomum  aurantiacum,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  stout,  tall,  glabrous.  Leaves  oblong  acuminate 
shortly  narrowed  at  base,  subcoriaceous  13  in.  long,  3  in. 


154  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X^ 

wide,  petiole  short  and  thick,  ligiile  oblong  truncate,  longer. 
Spike  ovoid,  1-5  in.  long,  peduncle  stout  2  in.  long  covered 
with  ovate  blunt  rounded  pubescent  bracts  finely  ribbed, 
ciliate  on  edge,  uppermost  '75  in.  long  '5  in.  wide.  Flowers 
large,  orange,  lip  centre  red.  Calyx  spathaceous  glabrous 
except  pubescent  tips  of  lobes  bilobed  lobes  ovate,  1  in.  long. 
Corolla  tube  as  long,  lobes  linear  oblong,  rounded  1  •  25  in. 
long.  Lip  obovate  broad,  rounded  1  in.  long  and  nearly  as 
broad.  Stamen  shorter,  with  a  short  rounded  crest  and  two 
broad,  oblong  curved  truncate  arms,  8-nerved.     Style  hairy. 

Kelantan  :  Glam  Wood  at  Kota  Bahru. 

77.  Amomum  cephalotes,  sp.  nov. 

Stems  slender,  glabrous.  Leaves  narrow',  linear  long 
acuminate  narrowed  to  base,  glabrous,  12  in.  long  -8  in. 
wide  ;  petiole  hardly  any,  ligule  '25  in.  oblong  entire. 
Capitula  subglobose  1*5  long,  on  a  peduncle  5  in.  long, 
covered  with  lanceolate  bracts,  glabrous  •  1  in.  or  less,  finally 
breaking  up  into  fibres.  Outer  bracts  lanceolate  pubescent, 
])ale  ribbed  1  in.  long.  Flowers  pedicelled  with  a  rather 
stout,  velvety  pedicel  •  25  in.  long.  Calyx  spathaceous  with 
3  acute  hairy  points.  Corolla  tube  -1  in.  long  lobes  linear 
oblong,  blunt  -5  in.  long  glabrous  lip  obovate  as  long  and 
about  -3  in.  wide,  with  2  central  keels.  Stamen  filament 
very  short,  anther  broad  oblong,  top  retuse,  no  crests 
pubescent. 

Pahang  :  Gunong  Senyum  (Evans). 

Flowers  cream  with  yellow  midrib  and  tips  slightly 
streaked  with  brown. 

78.  Alpinia  pahangensis,  sp.  nov. 

Stem  moderately  stout.  Leaves  linear  oblong  with  a 
setaceous  point  -6  in.  long,  base  acuminate,  softly  hairy  on 
both  sides  2  ft.  long,  3-5  in.  wide,  petiole  -5  in.  long  ;  ligule 
ovate  blunt  hairy  -3  in.  long,  sheath  finely  ribbed,  hairy. 
Racemes  stout  8  in.  long,  velvcity  hairy.  Bracts  at  base  2, 
lanceolate  acuminate  with  a  long  setaceous  point,  pale 
papery  pubescent,  edge  at  tip  hairy,  the  lowest  4-25 
in.  long,  1  in.  wide.  Flowers  numerous,  distant,  pedicels 
densely  velvety  hairy  -2  in.  long.  Bracts  (floral)  sheathing 
flowers  -5  in.  long,  pale,  hairy  at  base  and  on  edge  at  tip. 
Calyx  spathaceous  tubular  glabrous  -4  in.  long,  truncate  or 
obscurely  3-lobed,  cleft  on  one  side.  Corolla  tube  as  long, 
lobes  linear  lanceolate,  hairy  acute  -6  in.  long.  Lip  1  in. 
long,  3  lobed  apparently  red,  side  lobes  broad  truncate, 
midlobe  longer,  oblong  entire,  2  short  ears  at  base,  all 
glabrous.     Stamen  •  75  in.  long,  no  crest,  ovary  silky. 

Pahang  :  Pekan  (Evans). 

Allied  to  A.  hracteata,  Roxb.,  but  the  flowers  are 
smaller,  and  the  calyx  is  not  campanulate  and  deeply  cleft 
on  one  side  but  cylindric. 


1920]         Ridley  :  New  &  Rare  Malayan  Plants.  155 

LILIACEAE. 

79.  Peliosanthes  monticola,  sp.  nov. 

A  small  plant  with  apparently  a  rather  long  woody 
rhizome  silvery,  papery  sheaths  at  the  base.  Leaves  lanceo- 
late acuminate  at  both  ends  5  in.  long,  1-5  in.  wide,  nerves 
7.  Raceme  2  in.  long  on  a  1  in.  peduncle.  Rracts  at  base 
broad  lanceolate  -25  in.  long,  -1  in.  wide,  upper  ones  narrow 
lanceolate  linear.  Flowers  solitary  in  bracts.  Perianth 
•3  in.  wide,  lobes  oblong,  blunt  at  tip.  Stamens  forming 
a  complete  ring  free  froin  the  perianth  nearly  to  base. 
Ovary  free  from  stamen-ring,  superior,  style  thick,  cylindric. 

Perak  :  Gunong  Kerbau  5,000  ft.  (nat.  coll.  F.M.S. 
Mus.). 

This  is  perhaps  most  nearly  allied  to  P.  lurida  but  is 
altogether  smaller.  The  lower  peduncular  bracts  are  re- 
markably broad,  and  the  perianth  is  free  from  the  stamens 
and  ovary  and  so  is  inferior. 

80.  Dracaena  cuspidata,  sp.  nov. 

Dwarf  plant.  Stems  stout.  Leaves  oblong  abruptly 
cuspidate  with  setaceous  tip,  base  narrowed  to  sheath,  9  in. 
long  2-25  in.  wide,  cusp  -5  in.,  sheath  broad  1  in.  long. 
Panicle  racemiform,  fairly  stout  5  in.  long,  flowers  in  threes, 
pedicels  •!  in.  Perianth  very  slender  1  in.  long,  clubbed 
when  in  bud  lobes  very  narrow,  linear  free  two-third  of 
length,  filaments  longer  ;  anthers  short,  oblong. 

Kelantan  :  Chaning  Woods  (Ridley) . 

ERIOCAULACEAE. 

81.  Eriocaulon  disepalum,  sp.  nov. 

Dwarf  plant  4-6  in.  tall.  Leaves  linear  acuminate  2-5 
in.  long  •  15  in.  wide.  Scapes  5  in.  slender  numerous  ribbed 
heads  -2  in.  wide,  glabrous.  Involucral  bracts  white 
spathulate  round  with  a  few  minute  teeth  at  tip,  shorter 
than  head.  Floral  bracts  spathulate  with  broader  round 
top,  slightly  fuscous.  Male  flowers  ;  sepals  2,  short 
spathulate.  Corolla  tube  longer,  lobes  minute.  Anthers 
black,  6.  Female  flowers  sepals  3,  linear,  narrow,  petals 
none,  ovary  yellow  trilobed,  style  long,  slend^^r,  stigmas  2, 
seed  yellow,  ellipsoid  vertically  ribbed. 

Kelantan  :  Ricefields  at  Tumput,  Kota  Bahru. 

Allied  to  E.  Sieboldianiim,  Sieb.  but  differing  in  the 
free  sepals,  very  short  corolla  lobes  in  the  male  flower  and 
broader  leaves. 

82.  Eriocaulon  glabriflorum,  sp.  nov. 

Dwarf  plant  with  the  habit  of  E.  truncatum  but  leaves 
and  stems  narrower.  Leaves  narrow,  linear  acuminate 
•5-1  in.  long  -OS-'l  in.  wide.  Scapes  very  slender  3-4  in. 
tall.  Heads  scmiorbicular  -1  in.  wide,  white  glabrous. 
Involucral  bracts  oblong  subobtuse  shorter  than  the  head. 
Inner  bracts   spatliulate,   yellowish   white   tipped  fuscoua. 


156  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X. 

Male  flowers,  sepals  2,  spathulate  acute,  glabrous,  narrow, 
tipped  fuscous,  longer  than  the  corolla  tube,  lobes  3,  short, 
equal.  Female  flowers,  sepals  2,  linear,  spathulate.  Petals 
3,  similar.  Pistil  yellowish,  styles  little  shorter  than  the 
sepals. 

Damp  sand  and  on  rocks. 

Langkawi  Ids  :  Burau,  Telaga  Tujoh  (Ridley  15671  and 
8144)  ;  Burau  (Robinson  6239) .  Terutau  Id  :  Telok  Wau 
(Robinson).     Singgora  (Annandale). 

This  little  plant  belongs  to  the  same  set  as  E.  trunca- 
turn.  Ham.,  but  is  always  much  more  slender  with  narrower 
leaves  and  smaller  heads.  It  differs  also  in  its  perfectly 
glabrous  perianth  of  which  the  segments  also  are  much 
narrower. 

GRAMINEAE. 

83.  Dimeria  glabra,  sp.  nov. 

Tufted  grass  quite  glabrous.  Leaves  narrow  linear 
acuminate  4  in.  long  •  05  in.  wide,  ligule  very  short.  Culms 
slender  8-12  in.  tall.  Spikes  2-3,  slender  2*5  in.  long,  at 
first  red  then  paler,  rachis  minutely  scabrid  flexuous.  Callus 
glabrous.  Spikelets  sessile  -1  in.  long,  glabrous.  Glume 
I.  narrow  linear,  II.  oblong  keeled,  keel  red  edge  broad 
translucent,  white.  III.  shorter,  oblong.  Awn  none. 

Singapore  :  Holland  Road,  edge  of  a  swampy  hollow 
(Burkili  4674). 

Allied  to  D.  alata,  Hook.  fil.  of  Ceylon  and  much  re- 
sembling it,  but  completely  glabrous,  and  the  rachis  flatter 
and  more  flexuous. 

FILICES. 

84.  Lastroea  (Dryopteris)  Robinsonii,  sp,  nov. 

Stem  erect  1-5  in.  tall  with  long  roots.  Stepes  tufted 
the  bases  covered  with  linear  acuminate  chestnut  colored 
scales,  above  nerde  glender  dark  purple  and  brown  scurfy. 
Fronds  lanceolate  6-7  in.  long  pinnate  ;  pinnae  linear-oblong 
1*5  in.  long  -2  in.  wide  coriaceous,  lower  ones  shorter 
deflexed,  more  than  40,  rachis  densely  brown-tomentose, 
rachilla  and  midribs  above  densely  hairy  beneath  scurfy, 
pinnae  cut  into  ovate  lanceolate  blunt  lobes  neaily  to  the 
rachilla  about  20,  nerves  few  pinnate.  Sori  1  to  4  on  a 
lobe  on  the  tips  of  the  nerves  near  the  edge,  round. 
Indusium  reniform  glabrous. 

Perak  :  Gunong  Kerbau  at  4,200  ft.  (nat.  cofl.  F.M.S. 
Mus.) . 

This  elegant  little  fern  is  allied  to  L.  calcarata  and 
especially  to  the  form  ciliata  but  differs  in  the  indumentum, 
the  shortly  cut  lobes  and  the  distinctly  coriaceous  texture 
of  the  pinnae.  The  whole  frond  is  much  more  narrow  than 
in  any  form  of  L.  calcarata. 


V.     NOTES  ON  MALAYSIAN  BUTTERFLIES  (PART  I). 

By  Major  J.  C.  Moulton,  o.b.e,,  t.d.,  m.a.,  b.sc, 

Director,  Raffles  Museum  and  Library,  Singapcre. 

Since  the  publication  ni  1882-80  of  Distant's  fine  work, 
"Rhopalocera  Malayana,''  very  little  has  been  published 
on  the  Butterflies  of  the  Malay  Peninsula.  Neighbouring 
Malayan  countries  have  received  a  certain  amount  of  atten- 
tion ;  thus  de  Niceville  listed  the  Butterflies  of  Sumatra  in 
1895  ;  Piepers,  Snellen  and  Fruhstorfer  have  recently 
brought  out  four  volumes  on  the  Rhopalocera  of  Java  ; 
Shelford  (1901-06)  and  the  present  writer  (1911-15)  have 
dealt  with  most  of  the  Butterflies  of  Borneo.  Godfrey 
(1916)  has  listed  those  of  Siam,  which  includes  a  small 
portion  of  the  true  Malaysian  subregion. 

During  the  last  ten  years  an  important  contribution  to 
the  literature  on  Eastern  Rhopalocera  has  been  brought 
out  by  Dr.  Adalbert  Seitz  in  his  great  work  "The  Macro- 
lepidoptera  of  the  World,"  of  which  Vol.  IX  is  devoted 
to  the  Rhopalocera  of  the  Indo-Australian  region.  Up  to 
the  present  the  Papilionidae  and  Nymphalidae  have  been 
completed  ;  the  Lycaenidae  are  being  dealt  with  ;  but  the 
parts  on  the  Hesperidae  have  yet  to  appear.  There  is  an 
English  edition  of  this  work  ;  the  ver>'  numerous  and 
wholly  admirable  plates  add  considerably  to  its  value.  It 
is  also  up-to-date  in  its  adoption  of  the  trinomial  system 
of  nomenclature. 

Until  a  new  edition  of  Distant's  "  Rhopalocera 
Malayana  "  is  published,  Seitz's  *'  Macrolepidoptera  of  the 
World  "  must  be  regarded  as  indispensable  to  any  student 
of  Malaysian  Butterflies,  with  whom  in  any  case  both  works 
will  long  remain  in  use.  I  have  on  this  account  given 
references  under  each  species  to  these  two  works  ;  all  other 
references  have  been  relegated  to  foot-notes. 

It  is  thought,  therefore,  that  any  notes  which  will  supple- 
ment or  correct  the  information  given  in  Seitz's  "  Macro- 
lepidoptera of  the  World"  arc  perhaps  worth  publication 
from  time  to  time  as  they  accumulate.  The  following 
notes  are  chiefly  based  on  the  collections  in  the  Federated 
Malay  States  Museums,  part  of  which  I  have  had  the 
privilege  of  examining  and  identifying  recently.  Although 
as  1  understand  it,  no  exclusive  attention  has  hitherto  been 
paid  by  the  F.M.S.  Museums  to  the  formation  of  any  exten- 
sive collection  of  Malaysian  butterflies,  the  collections  so 
far  submitted  to  me  prove  of  no  little  interest. 

The  Director  of  Agriculture,  Kuala  Lumpur,  forwarded 
a  collection  of  Malay  Peninsula  Danaines  for  identification. 
Additional  localities  from  this  collection  have  been  incor- 
porated in  these  notes. 


158  Journal  of  the  F,M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

The  Director  of  the  Zoological  Museum,  Buitenzorg, 
has  been  kind  enough  to  send  me  for  identification  a  small, 
but  interesting,  collection  of  Danaines  from  Java  and 
neighbouring  islands.  Two  new  subspecies  from  the 
islands  of  Krakalau  and  Verlaten  arc  described  from  this 
nialerial. 

My  thanks  are  also  due  to  the  Acting  Curator  of  the 
Sarawak  Museum  for  the  loan  of  Bomean  specimens  from 
that  Museum  and  to  Mr.  E.  J.  Godfrey  for  Siamese  speci- 
mens for  comparison.  The  collections  in  the  Raffles 
Museum,  Singapore,  have  also  provided  material  for  addi- 
tional notes. 

The  "  Malaysian  "  buttertlies  considered  in  these  and 
subsequent  notes  are  confined  to  a  "  true  Malaysian  "  sub- 
region  ^  which,  for  Museum  i)urposes,  I  regard  as  those 
countries  lying  between  Lat.  10°  N.  and  10°  S.  and  Long.  95"^ 
and  120°  E.,  i.e.,  tlie  Malay  Peninsula,  Borneo,  Sumatra  and 
Java  and  adjacent  islands.  An  exception  is  made  in  the 
case  of  a  few  bulterllies  Ironi  S.W.  Siani  (Tasan,  Lat.  10° 
30'  N.,  and  Hat  Sanuk,  Lat.  12^  N.),  which  are  included 
in  the  F.M.S.  Museums  collection.  They  are  of  interest 
in  that  some  species  are  insepai'able  from  Malayan  forms, 
while  others  obviously  belong  to  the  Siamese-Tenasserim 
fauna. 

The  following  new  forms  and  new  combinations  are 
introduced  in  this  paper  : — 

8a.  Danaida  juventa  Cv.  krakaiaiiae  subsp.  nov. 
23.     Danaida  plexippus  I^.  plexippus  L.  connectens  f.  nov. 
24a.  Danaida  melanippus  Cr.  insularis  subsp.  nov. 
27o.  Euploea  crameri  Lac.  snelleni  subsp.  nov. 
34.     Euploea  core  Cr.  distanti  Moore,  comb.  nov. 
37a.  Euploea  alcathoe  Godt.  iiwnticola  subsp.  nov. 
40.     Euploea  dufresne  Godt.  hurrisi  Feld.  comb.  nov. 
40.     Euploea  dufresne  Godt.  milhrenes  Fruhst.  comb.  nov. 

40.     Euploea  dufresne   Godt.   coiwallaria   Thicjue,   comb, 
nov. 

40.  Euploea  dufresne  Godt.  nica  Fruhst.  comb.  nov. 

40.  Euploea  dufresne  Godt.  tyrianlhina  Moore,  comb.  nov. 

40.  Euploea  dufresne  Godt.  lacordairei  Moore,  comb.  nov. 

40.  Euploea  dufresne  Godt.  baweanica  Fruhst.,  comb.  nov. 

^\  true  Malaysian  subregion,  as  opposed  to  a  wider  area  in 
which  a  non-Malaysian  element  is  evident  although  not  necessarily 
predominant,  e.g.  an  area  including  Celebes,  Palawan  and  Slam, 
to  ail  of  which  countries  many  "  true  "  Malaysian  species  extend. 

The  boundaries  for  this  true  Malaysian  subregion  must  neces- 
sarily be  arbitrary  to  some  extent.  For  Museum  purposes  I  have 
extended  the  northern  boundary  to  Lai.  10°  N.,  although,  as  Mr. 
Boden  Kloss  points  out,  the  fauna  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  between 
7°  and  10°  N.  is  as  much  Indo-Chinese  in  character  as  Malayan. 

BoDEX  Kloss,  1918,  p.  245,  writes  :  "  Malaysian — Pertaining 
to  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra,  Borneo  and  Java.  Malayan — 
Pertaining  to  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Cf.  Sumatran,  etc"  See  also 
BouEN  Kloss,  1920,  pp.  79,  80. 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaipian  Butterflies.  159 

The  nomenclature  adopted  is  that  used  m  Seitz's 
"  Macrolepidoptera  of  the  World,"  unless  otherwise  stated. 
The  method  of  printing  the  subspcctfic  name  in  less  pro- 
minent type  than  the  generic  and  specific  names  was 
adopted  in  mv  "  Hand  List  of  the  Birds  of  Borneo  " '  and 
my  paper  on  the  "  Tlie  Butterflies  of  Borneo.-  The  reten- 
tion of  the  author's  name  for  a  species  even  when  followed 
by  a  subspecitic  name  was  also  adopted  in  those  papers. 
Both  courses  appear  to  me  to  be  an  improvement  on  the 
usually  accepted  method  of  writing  trinomials,  and  have 
since  received  the  official  approval  of  the  British  Association 
Committee  on  Zoological  Nomenclature. 

All  the  species  of  Danainae  now  known  from  Malaysia 
are  listed  in  this  paper  and  numbered  consecutively  from 
1  to  52.  Under  each  species  all  the  Malaysian  subspecies 
are  listed  but  not  numbered. 

A  list  of  the  literature  quoted  is  placed  at  the  end  of 
this  paper.     The  footnotes  refer  thereto. 

Fam.  NYMPHALIDAE. 

Subfam.  DANAINAE. 
Genus  Hestia,  Hiibn. 

The  foiu-  Malaysian  species  of  this  genus  fall  into  two 
groups  or  subgenera  :  - 

«.  Wings  eloif^J'tt'  i»n<l  weak  ;  hind  wing  with 
three  irregular  dark  spots  (the  outer  one 
small)  in  space  between  costal  nervure  and 

lirst  iiut)costal  nervule  Hestia. 

a'.    Wings  rounded  and  stronger  ;  hind  wing  with 

only  two  irregular  spots  in  costal  interspace    Nectaria. 

le  structural  differences  between  these  two  "  groups  " 
as  given  l)y  Frulislorfer  do  not  ap|)ear  to  be  sulticiently 
marked  or  constant  to  be  of  much  assistance.  The  second 
subcostal  nervule  of  the  fore  wing  arises  as  a  rule  very 
slightly  nearer  to  the  apex  of  the  ceU  in  Hestia  males  than 
in  Nectaria,  but  in  Hestia  females  there  are  some  in  which 
the  origin  of  this  nervule  is  just  as  far  from  the  apex  of  the 
cell  as  in  the  Nectaria  species.  The  second  character  given 
by  Fruhstorfer,  viz.  length  of  lower  discocellular  in  the 
hind  wing,  is  also  variable  and  not  markedly  distinct  in  the 
two  subgenera.  The  sui)erficial  characters  given  in  the 
above  key,  however,  wUI  serve  to  distinguish  the  two 
subgenei-a^  quite  clearly. 


%. 


'  MouLTox,  1914,  pp.  127-8,  131  et  seq. 

'MouLTON,  191.'),  pp.  198,  200  et  seq. 

'  FRUnsr()UKi:R,  1910,  p,  218. 

M  follow  Bingham  in  using  the  term  "subgenus"  for  sub- 
divisions of  a  genus,  rather  than  de  Niceville  who  used  the  term 
*'  group."  Fruhstorfer  uses  both  terms,  the  latter  ranking  as  of 
less  importance  than  the  former.  The  distinction  between 
(lillerences  of  "  subgeneric  "  and  (lillerences  of  "  group "  impor- 
tance nmst  necessarily  be  a  mailer  of  personal  opinion,  probably 
I)roductive  of  more  confusion  and  discord  than  clearness.  In  this 
paper,  therefore,  genera,  when  divided  at  all,  are  split  into  sub- 
genera only. 


160  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Subgenus  Hestia,  Hiibn. 

1.  Hestia  lynceus  Drury  reinwardti  Moore. 

Jlestia   lynceus  reinwardti   Fruhstorfer  1910,   p.   220. 

Hestia  lynceus  Distant  1882~8C,  pp.  0  and    t05,  Tab.  T,  fig.  2. 

Loc.  Perak  :  Kampar  ;  Selangor  :  Ulu  Langat,  Bukit 
Kutu  and  Ayer  Itam  ;  Negri  Sembilan  :  Bukit  Tangga  ; 
Pahang  :  Kuala  Tahan  ;  Tioman  Island  (F.M  S.  Mus.) 
Selangor  :  Klang  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.).  Perak  ;  Selangor  ; 
Negri  Sembilan  :  Gunong  Angsi  ;  Singapore  (Raffles  Mus.) 
Distrih.  Confined  to  Malaysia,  where  the  following 
subspecies  are  recognized  : — 

H.  I.  lynceus  Drury  Sumatra. 

H.  L  reinwardti  Moore  Malay  Peninsula. 

H.  I  niasica  F'ruhst.  Nias  1. 

H.  I  fumata  Fruhst.  Borneo. 

H.  I.  stolli  Moore  Java. 

H.  I.  thalassica  Fruhst.  Natuna  Ls. 

2.  Hestia  logani  Moore  logani  Moore. 

Hestia  logani  logani  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  220. 

Hestia  logani  as  a  synonym  of  Hestia  lyneeus    Distant  1886,  p.  405. 

Loc.  Perak  :  Gunong  Kledang,  alt.  2640  ft.,  November 
1916  (Raffles  Mus.). 

Distrib.  Confined  to  Malaysia\  with  the  following 
subspecies  distinguished  : — 

H.  I.  logani  Moore  Malay  Peninsula. 

H.  I.  dhiriji  Moore  Sumatra. 

H.  1.  donovani  Moore  Singapore. 

H.  I    diana  Fruhst.  Batu  Is. 

H.  I.  virgo  Fruhst.  Borneo. 

H.  I.  alceste  Fruhst,  Natuna  Is. 

H.  l.  mevaria  Fruhst.  Java. 

Fruhstorfer  distinguishes  these  two  species  thus  : 
lynceus,  noticeable  for  the  dense  blackish  dusting  on  the 
upper  side  of  both  wings,  while  in  logani  the  ground-colour 
is  lighter  and  the  blackish  dusting  on  the  upper  side  is 
reduced.  Admittedly  these  Hesiias  are  ver>'  variable  ;  so 
much  so  that  other  writers  have  regarded  lynceus  and 
logani  as  but  one  variable  species.  Breeding  experiments 
will  alone  decide  the  point,  although  Fruhstorfer  regards 
certain  differences  in  the  genitalia  as  "  of  such  decisive 
significance  that  the  specific  rank  of  logani  cannot  be  ques- 
tioned "  {I.e.).  Piepers  2  doubts  the  value  of  these  differ- 
ences in  genitalia. 

'  Frulistorfer  recognizes  another  subspecies,  H.  I.  hypata 
Fruhst.  from  the  Sulu  Islands  to  the  North  of  Borneo,  i.e.,  just 
outside  the  limits  of  the  Malaysian  subregion. 

'PiEPERS,  1913,  p.  21,  writes  :  "Dr.  Henri  de  Graaf  a  specialist 
in  this  kind  of  researches,  has  investigated  microscopically  2.^ 
specimens  from  my  collection,  both  light  and  dark  coloured,  and 
he  did  not  find  a  single  one  amongst  them  whose  genitalia  agreed 
with  the  figure  given  of  those  of  stolli,  on  the  contrary  they  all 
agreed  with  those  given  of  logani,  and  although  considerable 
individual  differences  were  observed  in  this  respect  it  was  only 
as  regards  the  form  of  the  valvae  and  valvulae  and  not  to  such 
an  extent  in  connection  with  the  structure  of  the  principal  organs 
that  the  existence  of  more  than  out  species  could  be  inferred 
from  it." 


1921  j  Moui.TON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  161 

Of  the  Malay  Peninsula  specimens  examined,  all  appear 
referable  to  lynceus  with  the  exception  of  one  maie  in  the 
Rallies  Museum  which  I  have  placed  with  some  doubt 
under  logani. 

Subgenus  Nectabia,  Dalm. 

a.     Hind-marginal  row  of  aHernately  large 

and  small  black  spots  on  both  wings  linteata. 

n\    Hind-marginal  black  border  enclosing 

hind-marginal  row  of  white  spots  chersonesia. 

8.     Hestia  hypermnestra  Wcstw.  linteata  Bull. 

liextia  lynceua  reinwardtl  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.   220. 
Hestia  lyncena  Distant  1882— 8B,  pp.  6  and  405.  Tab.  I.  flg.  2. 
Hestia  hypermnestra  linteata  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  221. 
Hestia  linteata  Distant  1882,  p.  7,  Tab.  1,  flg.  1. 

Loc.  Negri  Sembilan  :  Bukit  Tangga  (F.M.S.  Mus.). 
Pahang  :  Kuala  Krau  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.).  Negri  Sem- 
bilan  :  Jelebu  (Raffles  Mus.). 

Distrib.  Confined  to  Malaysia  except  for  a  slight  exten- 
sion northward  above  Lat.  10°  N.  into  South  Tenasserini. 

H.  h.  hijijt-rmnestra  Wcstw.  Borneo  and  Xatuna  Is. 

H.  h.  arbela  Fruhst.  North  Borneo  (Mt.  Kinabalu). 

H.  h.  herd  Fruhst.  Sumatra. 

H.  li.  linteata  Butl.  Malav  Peninsula. 

//.  h.  helia  Westw.  .lava    (West).' 

Evidently  a  rare  species.     The  F.M.S.  Museums  speci- 
men agrees  very  well  with  Distant's  figure  in  "  Rhopalocera 
Malayana." 
4.     Hestia  leuconoe  Eschsch.  chersonesia  Fruhst. 

Hestia  leuconoe  chersonesia  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  222. 
Hestia   Ifuronoc  nigrittnu    Fruhstorfer  T.)10,  p.   222. 
Hestia  leuconoe   natunensis   Fruhstorfer   1910,   p.   222. 
^tsliu   leuconoe  javana   Fruhstorfer   1910,  p.   222. 
Hestia  leuconoe  Distant  188().  p.  406,  Tab.  XXXIX,  flg.  3. 

Loc.  Negri  Sembilan  :  Jelebu  ;  Johore,  Jalan  Dato  ; 
Singapore  (Raffles  Mus.).     Singapore  (Distant), 

Distrib.  Loo  C.hoo  Islands,  Formosa  and  Philippines 
to  Malaysia. 

i '.  /.  chersonesia  Fruhst.  Malay   Peninsula    to   Borneo, 

.lava  and  Natiina  Is. 
H.  t.  vedana  Fruhst.  Batu  Is. 

//.  /.  enganoensis  Doh.  iuigano  I. 

Although  Fruhstorfer  gives  Ihe  "  Malay  Peninsula " 
as  part  of  the  distribution  of  chersonesia,  I  suspect  that  it 
is  confined  to  the  southern  half  of  the  Peninsula  :  perhaps 
not  occurring  north  of  Negri  Sembilan.  Godfrey  ^  des- 
cribes a  very  distinct  subspecies  siainensis  from  Nong  Khor 
and  Hup  Bon  in  Siam  (Lat.  13  N.).  Probably  the  original 
continental  range  of  leuconoe  has  long  been  interrupted 
and  the  species  has  died  out  for  some  reason  or  other  in 
the  north  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  leaving  a  gap  between 
the  range  of  (and  at  the  same  lime  giving  rise  to)  the 
present-day  subspecies  siamensis  and  chersonesia. 

'  Fj!i  iisTouFKH  (1910)  destrJbcs  another  subspecies  vollenhoveni 
"  with  the  somewhat  uncertain  locaUtv  'Java,'  known  from  a  figure 
ol  Siu'lleii  van  Vollenhoven's."     PiFiy:i'.s  (1913)  docs  not  mention  it. 
bODFUKY,  1916,  p.  117. 


162  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

It  has  been  shewn'  tlial  the  subspecies  nigriana, 
chersonesia  and  natiinensis,  recognized  by  Fruhstorfer, 
are  not  separable.  Piepers'  slates  that  jauana  is  referable 
to  mitunensis.  I  therefore  use  Fruhstorfer's  name  cher- 
sonesia to  cover  all  these  forms  from  the  Malay  Peninsula, 
Lingga  Archipelago,  Banka,  Borneo,  Natuna  Islands,  Java 
and  the  Kangean  Islands  (East  of  Java) . 

It  is  evidently  a  variable  species,  but  unfortunately  rare 
in  collections.  Godfrey's  siamensis  is  remarkable  for  the 
absence  of  a  spot  immediately  below  the  cell  in  the  fore 
wing  between  the  first  and  second  median  nervules,  which 
is  always  present  in  chersones-'a.  The  double  cell-spot  in 
the  hind  wing  of  siamensis  is  very  much  smaller  than  that 
of  chersonesia. 

Genus  Ideohsis,  Ilorsf. 

The  only  species  of  this  genus  found  in  the  Malay 
Peninsula  is  common  and  well-distributed.  The  general 
pattern  of  large  black  spots  and  blackened  veins  on  vitreous 
smoky-white  ground-colour  makes  it  easily  recognizable, 
although  if  it  were  not  for  its  smaller  and  stronger  wings, 
it  might  be  taken  for  a  Hestia. 

Ideopsis  has  been,  until  recently,  regarded  as  an  inter- 
mediate between  Hestia  and  Danaida.  Fruhstorfer,  how- 
ever, compares  it  to  the  Hadena-gvowj)  of  Danaida,  and 
suggests  tliat  the  larva  and  pupa,  when  discovered,  will 
resemble  those  of  Radena  rather  tlian  those  of  Hestia.  It 
is  remarkable  that  the  life-history  ^1  so  common  a  species 
should  still  remam  unknown, 

5.     Ideopsis  daos  Boisd.  perakana  Fruhst. 

hleoiisis  daos  perakana   Fruhstorfer   1910,  p.  216,  flg.   70a. 
lieiiitsis  daos  Distant  JS82-8(i.  pp.  8  &    .07,  Tab.  I,  figs.  3  &  4. 

An  examination  of  some  200  specimens  from  the  F.M.S. 
Museums,  the  F.M.S.  Agricultural  Department  and  the 
Rallies  Museum,  Singapore,  shows  that  this  species  is  widely 
distributed  throughout  the  Malay  Peninsula,  ranging  from 
low  country  to  3,000  ft.  and  probably  higher. 

Probably  on  the  wing  all  the  year  round,  as  specimens 
in  the  above  collections  have  been  caught  in  every  month 
of  the  year  except  January,  February  and  October 

The  species  is  variable  in  the  size  of  the  wing  and  in 
the  size  of  the  black  spots.  Males  and  females  are  equally 
abundant. 

A  single  female  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums  froux  Tioman 
Island  (oil  tlie  East  (Loasl  of  Pahang  and  Johore)  differs 
from   the  mainland  form   in   the  much  shorter  fore  wing 


'MouLTox,  1915,  p.  2(H. 
M'lEi'KKS,  1913,  p.  22. 


1921] 


MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies. 


163 


and  more  smoky  colouring  above  and  below  ;  in  this  last 
respect  it  approaches  mainland  males.  Further  examples 
are  wanted  from  this  island  before  the  question  of  possible 
subspecilic  distinction  for  this  forni  can  be  settled. 

Distrib.      Neomalaya   and   Palawan.      The   Malaysian 
subspecies  are  : — 


/.  d.  daos  Boisd. 
/.  d.  perakana  Fruhst. 
/.  d.  natunensis  Fruhst. 
/.  d.  lingana  Fruhst. 
/.  d.  sonia  Fruhst. 
/.  d.  eudora  Gray 
/.  d.  costalis  Moore 
/.  d.  batuiia  F'ruhst. 
/.  d.  nigrocostalis  Hag. 


Borneo. 
Mentawt'i  Is. 
Malay  Peninsula, 
r.ingga  Archipelago. 
Xatiina  Is. 
North   Sumatra. 
West  Sumatra. 
Nias  1. 
Batu  Is. 


I 


One  other  very  distinct  form  occurs  in  Malaysia  : — 
6.     Jdeopsis  gaura  Horsf . 

Idcojt.sis  gaiirti    I'nihstni-l'ci-    I'.tltl,   p.   2\(\. 

Distrib.     Java. 

It  is  perhaps  doubtful  policy  to  give  it  specific  dis- 
tinction, as  it  is  obviously  the  Javan  representative  of  daos. 
Unfortunately  gaura  is  the  older  name,  so  that  ii  we  are 
to  recognize  but  one  species  in  Malaysia,  it  will  bear  that 
name,  while  Boisduval's  long-accepted  name  daos  will 
only  cover  the  Bornean  subspecies. 

On  the  other  hand  tiie  separation  of  the  Javan  form 
as  a  separate  species  serves  a  good  purpose  in  emphasizing 
the  marked  dill'erence  between  Ihe  fauna  of  Java  and  that 
of  the  three  neighbouring  countries  (Malay  Peninsula, 
Borneo  and  Sumatra)  which  I  have  designated  Neomalaya.^ 
Genus  DANAmA,  Lair. 

The  species  found  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  fall  into  the 
following  subgenera  : — 

a.    Males  without  scent  patch  on  hind  wing  Radena. 

a\    Males  with  scent  patch  on  hind  wing. 
b.     Two  patches  at  anal  angle,  on  tirst  median 
nervule  and  sub-median  nervure. 
c.    Sub-median       nervure       noticeably 

dilated  below  Chittira. 

c\    Sub-median  nervure  not  noticeably 
dilated. 

d.     Base  of  liind  wing  not  yellow     Paralitica. 
cT.   Base    of    hind    wing    canary 

yellow  Ravadeba. 

b\  One  patch  only,  on  under  side  between 
first  median  nervule  and  sub-median 
nervure. 

c.     Patch  protruding  as  a  prominent  flap     Tirumala. 
c\    Patch  smaller  and  less  prominent. 

d.     Patch  toucliing  vein    .  Anosia. 

d\    Patch  not  touching  vein. 

e.  Middle  discoceliular  of 
hind  wing  strongly 
angled  m  male  Lininas. 

e\  Middle  discoceliular 
slightly  incurved  in 
male  Danaida. 


'  MouLTON,  1915,  p.  198. 


164  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Subgenus  Radena,  Moore. 

a.    Discal  region   of  hind  wing  predominantly 

fuscous,  marked  with  hyaline  streaks  vulgaris. 

a\  Discal  region  of  hind  wing  predominantly 
pale  green  hvaline,  marked  with  fuscous 
lines  «''«^- 

7.     Danaida  similis  Linn,  vulgaris  Butl. 

Danaida  similis  vulgaris  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  211. 
Danaida  aimilis  interposita  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  211. 
Danaida  similis  macrina  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  211. 
Radena  vulgaris  Distant  1882,  p.  10,  Tab.  1,  fig,  8. 

A  common  butterfly  ranging  throughout  the  Malay 
Penmsula  from  Hat  Sanuk,  S.W.  Siam  (Lat.  12  N.),  south 
to  Singapore,  Borneo  and  Sumatra. 

Two  of  the  three  specimens  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums 
series  from  S.W.  Siam  are  certainly  not  separable  from 
vulgaris.  The  third  is  referable  to  the  Siamese  subspecies 
persirnilis  Moore,  wet-season  form.  Large  examples  of 
this  are  regarded  by  Fruhstorfer  as  an  aberration  named 
avenlina  Cramer,  which  is  characterized  by  the  post-cellular 
spots  of  the  fore  wing  being  rounded  instead  of  acutely 
wedge-shaped.  The  Siamese  persirnilis  is  similarly  dis- 
tinguished from  vulgaris,  but  it  is  a  smaller  insect  than 
the  aventina  figured  by  Fruhstorf-er.^  In  the  dry-season 
form  the  post-cellular  spots  are  reduced  in  both  wings. 
A  specimen  from  Trengganu  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums  is  an 
interesting  intermediate  between  wet-season  persirnilis  and 
aventina.  The  hyaline  areas  are  rather  larger  and  more 
noticeably  pale  green  than  in  typical  vulgaris.  In  size  it 
is  larger  than  persirnilis,  but  not  quite  so  large  as  aventina. 
The  application  of  this  latter  name  to  the  wet-season  form 
of  both  persirnilis  and  vulgaris  is,  I  think,  permissible, 
although  the  dry-season  fornis  of  both  are  readily  separated. 
Fruhstorfer  records  a  large  wet-season  form  hyria  in 
Annam  and  Tonkin,  drft'ering  from  aventina  in  having  the 
hyaline  areas  whitish  instead  of  green.  The  wet-season 
form  aventina  thus  ranges  southwards  through  Siam  and  is 
known  at  present  from  Hat  Sanuk  (Lat.  12°  N.),  Tasan 
(Lat.  10°  30'  N.)  and  Trengganu  (Lat.  5°  30'  N). 

Frulistorfer's  subspecies  interposita"  for  the  Bornean 
forms  and  macrina  ^  for  the  Sumatran  forms  have  already 
been  sunk  as  synonyms  of  vulgaris.  The  remaining 
Malaysian  forms  are  hsted  below. 

Distrib.  Loo  (^hoo  Islands  to  Palawan,  Sumbawa  and 
Flores,  and  west  through  South  China  and  Malaysia  to  India 
and  Ceylon. 


D. 

s. 

vulgaris  Butl. 

Malay  Peninsula,  Boi'neo, 
Natima  Is.  and  Sumatra. 

D. 

s. 

vulgaroides  Fruhst. 

Java. 

D. 

s. 

megaroides  Fruhst. 

Mas  I. 

D. 

s. 

macra  Doh. 

Engano  I. 

D. 

s. 

ditiones  Fruhst. 

Batu  Is. 

'  Fruhstorfer,  1910,  fig.  78  C. 
'  MouLTON,  1915,  p.  201. 
'Rothschild,  1920,  p.  148. 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  165 

The  Javan  form  vulgaroides  is  very  doubtfully  separa- 
ble. Those  submitted  to  me  by  the  Buitenzorg  Museum 
difter  from  Malay  Peninsula  forms  in  having  the  hyaline  cell 
streak  slightly  reduced.  In  this  point,  however,  they  agree 
well  with  Bomean  specimens. 

8.     Danaida  juventa  Cr.  sitali  Fruhst. 

Danaida  Juventa  sttah  Fruhstorfer  1910.  p.  213. 
Radena  Juventa  Distant  1886,  p.  407,  Tab.  XXXIX,  fig.  4. 

Loc.  Trengganu  5  ^  ^  ;  Pahang  and  Johore  :  Rumpin 
and  Endau  4$  5 ,  1  $  ;  Tioman  Island  2$  S,  1  9    (F.M.S. 

Miis.).      Auamba   Islands:    Pulo    Siaiitan    l5,    l9;    Pulo 
Aor  2$  9  ;  Tioman  Island  1  $   (Raffles  Mus.). 

Distrih.  Malay  Peninsula  and  Archipelago  to  New 
Guinea  and  the  Solomon  Islands.  The  sid)species  recog- 
nized in  the  Malaysian  subregion  are  : — 

D.  /.  juventa  Cr.  Java  and  Bali. 

D.  j.  mincia  Fruhst.  Bawean  I. 

D.  y.  longa  Doh.  Engano  I. 

D.  j.  krakatauae  Moulton  Krakatau  I.  and  Verlaten  I. 

D.  ).  robinsoni  Boths.  Sumatra. 

D.  /.  sitah  Fruhst.  Anamba  Is.,  Natuna  Is.  and 

Malay  Peninsula. 

D.  j.  kinitis  Fruhst.  North  Borneo. 

The  above  record  from  Trengganu  (Lat.  6°  N.)  repre- 
sents the  northern  Umit  to  the  range  of  this  species.  It  is 
not  recorded  from  Siam. 

Fruhstorfer  suggests  that  reports  of  the  occurrence  of 
juventa  in  Malacca  and  Perak  are  possibly  due  to  recent 
migration,  as  the  species  is  typically  insular.  The  occur- 
rence of  specimens  on  the  east  coast  of  the  Peninsula  in 
no  way  diltcring  from  Tioman  Island  or  example"  from  the 
Anamba  Islands  tends  to  confirm  Fruhstorfer's  theory. 
Distant  {I.e.)  recorded  one  from  Singapore.  The  example 
figured  by  him  is  perhaps  referable  to  this  subspecies, 
although  the  underside  is  brown  rather  than  black. 

Fruhstorfer  noticed  its  absence  from  Sumatra,  but 
Rothschild  ^  has  now  described  a  new  subspecies,  D.  j. 
robinsoni,  from  the  west  coast  of  Sumatra.  Another  new 
subspecies,  D.  j.  krakatauae,  from  the  small  islands  of 
Krakatau  and  Verlaten,  between  Sumatra  and  Java,  is  des- 
cribed below. 

A  single  male  in  the  Raffles  Museum  labelled  "  Johore  " 
appears  to  be  typical  juventa  and  possibly  comes  from 
Java.  It  differs  from  the  above-mentioned  examples  of 
sitah  in  the  yellower  shade  of  ground-colour,  i.e.  lacking  the 
pale  green  tint  of  sitah,  in  the  dark  colouring  b'^neath  being 
brown  rather  than  blackish-brown  as  in  sit(di,  m  the  margi- 
nal spots  above  being  smaller  and  the  veins  less  heav5y 
marked  with  brown-fuscous. 


'  BOTHSCHILD,  1920,  p.  148. 


166  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

8«.  Danaida  juventa  Cr.  kvakatmiae  subsp.  iiov. 

Differs  from  juventa  from  Java  in  the  much  heavier 
black  fuscous  markings  and  larger  size.  In  this  respect  it 
is  similar  to  sitah  from  the  Anambas  and  Malay  Peninsula. 
Differs  from  sitah  in  having  the  fore  wing  slightly  narrower 
and  more  pointed,  the  two  large  greenish-white  spots 
between  the  median  nervules  broader  and  less  elongate  ; 
the  white  spots  forming  the  double  submarginal  row  in 
both  wings  smaller  and  more  similar  to  those  in  juventa. 
Underside  fuscous  black,  lacking  the  brownish  tinge  visible 
in  sitah.  The  Engano  form  longa'  has  the  discal  spots 
beyond  the  cell  in  the  fore  wing  more  elongate.  The  West 
Sumatran  form,  robinsoni,  is  stated  to  be  intermediate 
between  longa  and  phana  from  Lombok,  and  to  differ 
from  longa  in  having  all  the  pale  markings  on  both  wings 
whiter  and  larger. 

Exp.  al.  72-75  mm. 

Type   $  :  Krakatau  Island,  December,  1919.     Co-Type 
S  :  Verlaten  Island  (near  Krakafeui),  December,  1919.    Both 
in  the  Buitenzorg  Museum,  Java. 

Subgenus  CnrrTiRA,  Moore. 

a.  Hind-margin  of  both  wings  broadly  black- 
brown  fuscous.  plataniston. 

a\  Hind  wing  broadly  margined  with  red- 
brown  in  contrast  to  dark  fuscous  hind- 
marginal  colouring  of  fore  wing.  ethologa. 

9.     Danaida  melaneus  Cr.  plataniston  Fruhst. 

Danaida  melaneus  plataniston  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  210. 
Danaida  melaneus  sinopion  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  210. 
Danais  melaneus  Distant  1882-86,  pp.  14  &  408,  Tab.  I,  fig.  6. 

Loc.  S.  W.  Siani  :  Hat  Sanuk  and  Tasan,  .%  $  s  ; 
Perak  :  Maxwell's  Hill  33  5  S ,  1  9 ,  Kuala  Eangsar,  Batang 
Padang  ;  Selangor  :  Bukil  Kutu,  Ulu  Langat,  Ginling  Bidai, 
2,200  ft.  (F.M.S.  Mus.).  Perak  :  Gunong  Kledang,  2,()4()  ft.  ; 
Selangor-Pahang  :  Semangko  Pass,  2,700  ft.  ;  Selangor  : 
Bukit  Kutu,  8,457  ft.  ;  Negri  Sembilan  :  Guncng  Angsi 
2,000-2,700  ft.,  Bukit  Lantai,  2,400  ft.  (Baffles  Mus.). 

March  to  August  and  in  November  ;  probably  on  the 
wing  all  the  year  round. 

Fruhstorfer  describes  the  "  very  rare  race  of  the  Malay 
Peninsula  "  as  sinopion  (I.e.).  His  description  fits  Distant's 
figure  (I.e.)  of  this  species,  but  neither  the  figure  nor  the 
description  agrees  with  a  long  series  from  the  Malay  Penin- 
sula examined  by  me.  The  localities  given  above  are  taken 
from  a  series  of  84  specimens  from  the  F.M.S.  Museums 
and  20  from  the  Raffles  Museum.  I  have  since  examined 
others  from  Pahang,  Kuala  Lipis,  and  Negri  Sembilan,  Bukit 
Tangga  (F.M.S.  Mus.),  and  from  Selangor,  Ginting  Simpah 
and  Kuala  Selangor  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.).  It  may  there- 
fore be  regarded  as  a  comparatively  common  species  in  the 
Malay  Peninsula  and  well  distributed.     The  rarity  of  the 

'  DoHEHTY,  1891,  p.  24,  pi.  1,  tig.  3,  ~     * 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  167 

females,  however,  is  a  point  worth  noticing,  since  in  the 
above  series  there  were  only  5  females  to  99  males. 

The  characters  given  by  Fruhstorfer  for  sinopion  are 
(i)  the  narrower  vitreous  areas  and  (ii)  the  almost  entirely 
black  ground  colour  of  both  wings  beneath,  which  only 
show  slight  traces  of  a  red-brown  tinge.  In  regard  to  the 
first  pomt,  the  Malayan  specimens  agree  admirably 
with  the  Indian  example  figured  by  de  Niceville.^  There 
are,  however,  two  males  in  the  Raffles  Museum,  in  which 
the  top  posl-cellular  hyaline  streak  in  the  fore  wdng  is 
reduced  to  a  small  dash  less  than  half  the  length  of  the 
lower  post-cellular  hyaline  streak.  The  white  marginal 
dots  of  the  hind  wing  present  a  variable  feature  :  a  complete 
series  being  present  in  some  specimens,  while  in  others  two 
or  three  only  are  barely  visible  and  in  one  example  they  are 
absent  altogether.  Similarly  the  two  small  spots  between 
the  median  nervules  of  the  hind  wing  vary  in  size,  and  in 
some  specimens  partially  or  completely  fuse  with  the  larger 
hyaline  spots  immediately  below  the  outer  half  of  the  cell. 

The  ground-colour  beneath  is  certainly  blackish,  but  in 
many  specimens  a  pronounced  reddish  wash  is  very  notice- 
able. I  think,  therefore,  that  Fruhstorfer's  sinopion  for 
the  Malayan  form  must  be  regarded  as  a  synonym 
of  plataniston,  under  which  name  the  Indian  form  is  dis- 
tinguished by  Fruhstorfer.  Evans-,  however,  retains 
Cramer's  name  melaneiis  for  the  Indian  form.  Cramer's 
species  is  supposed  to  have  come  from  South  China. 
Whether  the  Indian  and  South  China  forms  are  separable 
oi'  not  1  do  not  know.  Godfrey  records  plataw'slon  from 
Siam.  Two  examples  he  sends  me  from  Me  Song  (Siam) 
are  certainly  inseparable  from  the  Malayan  plataniston. 
The  thirty-six  males  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums  from  Hat 
Sanuk  and  Tasan,  S.W.  Siam,  are  rather  smaller  than  the 
more  southern  Malayan  examples  and  they  might  be 
referred  to  Fruhstorfer's  dry-season  form  neopah'a  but  for 
the  fact  that  they  are  by  no  means  "  entirely  light  red  " 
beneath.  The  submarginal  dots  in  these  are  generally 
though  not  always,  purer  white  than  in  most  of  the  Malayan 
examples. 

Distrib.    Cliina  and  Northern  India  to  Siam,  Malay 
Peninsula  and  Java.     The  only  Malaysian  subspecies  are  : — 
D.  m.  plataniston  Fruhst.  Malay  Peninsula  (northwards 

,,  to  Siam  and  India). 

U.  m.  pseudomelaneus  Moore        .lava. 

Closely  alhed  to  melaneiis  come  two  other  Malaysian 
species,  which  do  not,  however,  occur  in  the  Malay 
Peninsula  : — 

10.     Danaida  banksi  Moore  banksi  Moore. 

Danaida  banksi  banksi  Fnihstorfei-   1910,  p.  210. 

Distrib.  The  species  is  confined  to  Sumatra,  Nias  and 
Batu  Islands,  divided  into  three  subspecies  : — 

'  DeI^iceville,  1882,1)1.  V,  flg.^^ 
*  Evans,  1920,  p.  560. 
'  Godfrey,  1916,  p.  118. 


168  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         I  Voi .  X, 

D.  b.  banksi  Moore  Sumatra. 

I),  h.  fiineralis  Butl.  Nias  I. 

D.  b.  mnasippiis  Fruhst.  Batu  Is. 

11.  Danaida  crowleyi  Jenner-Weir. 

Danaicla  crowleyi   Fruhstorfer   1910,  p.   210. 

Distrih.     Mountains  of  North  Borneo  and  Saiawak. 

12.  Danaida  sita  Koll.  ethologa  Swinh. 

Danaida  sita  ethologa  Fruhftorfer  1910,  p.  211. 

Danais  tytia  Distant  1886,  p.  408,  p.  408,  Tab.  XLl,  flg.  15. 

Loc.  Perak  :  Maxwell's  Hill  7  3  6;  Selangor,  Bukit 
Kutu  2s  $,  19  (F.M.S.  Mus.).  Selangor:  Bukit  Kutu, 
2,300  ft.,  1  $  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.) .  Selangor— Pahang  : 
Semangko  Pass  2,700  ft.,  ^$  $  (Raftles  Mus.).  March,  May 
to  August. 

Frulislorfer  states  of  this  subspecies  that  "  only  a  few 
examples  have  hitherto  been  found."  Thorough  collecting 
on  the  mountains  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  will  probably 
show  that  it  is  well  distributed  and  not  uncommon. 

Distrih.  The  species  ranges  from  Kashmir  and  the 
Himalayas  to  China  and  Formosa  and  south  to  the  Malay 
Peninsula. 

Not  recorded  in  Godfrey's  list  from  Siam,  but  he  kindly 
informs  me  (January  1921)  that  it  has  been  taken  in 
Northern  Siam  at  Khun  Than  3,600  ft.  (Lat.  18°  N.)  and 
near  Thaungyin  river.  The  example  sent  to  me  from  the 
former  locality  is  referable  to  tira  Fruhst.,  which  is  distin- 
guished from  the  Eastern  Himalayan  form  tytia  Gray,  by 
the  absence  of  a  thick  red  cell-streak  in  the  hind  wing. 
Fruhstorfer  gives  Assam  and  Tenasserim  for  the  distribu- 
tion of  lira.  The  longer  sub-apical  streaks  in  the  fore  wing 
and  the  presence  of  two  whitish  sub-apical  dots  in  the  hind 
wing  separate  this  subspecies  clearly  from  the  only 
Malaysian  subspecies,  ethologa,  which  lacks  these  dots  and 
has  the  upper  siibapical  streaks  considerably  shortened. 

13.  Danaida  tityoides  Hag. 

Danaida  sita   tityoides  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.   211,  flg.   78d. 

Distrib.     Mountains  of  Sumatra. 

A  well-separated  form  for  which  Fruhstorfer  (I.e.) 
suggests,  and  Rothschild  ^  adopts,  specific  distinction. 

Two  more  species  of  this  subgenus  occur  in  Malaysia, 
but  not  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  : — 

14.  Danaida  albata  Zinck.  albata  Zinck. 

Danaida  atbala  albata  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  209. 
Danaida  albata  gilva  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  209. 

Loc.  Ongop  Ongop,  4,800  ft.,  idjen  Massif  East  Java, 
13   ^  cf    (F.M.S.  Mus.). 

The  East  Java  form  has  been  separated  by  Fruhstorfer 
as  gilva.  The  distinctions  he  gives,  viz.  smaller  size, 
smoke-brown  underside,  with  cell  of  hind  wing  "  almost 

'  Rothschild,  1920,  p.  147. 


1921]  MovLTO^i  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  169 

always  darkened  by  a  more  or  less  extended  grey-brown 
tinge,"  do  not  hold  good.  In  the  above  series  in  +he  F.M.S. 
Museums  the  expanse  of  wings  varies  from  75-95  mm.  In 
some,  irrespective  of  size,  the  cell  of  the  hind  wing  is 
darkened,  in  others  entirely  free  from  fuscous  sc  lies.  The 
smoke-brovvn  darkening  of  the  underside  is  also  a  variable 
feature. 

I  follow  Piepers  therefore  in  recognizing  but  one  form 
from  the  whole  of  Java. 

Two  other  subspecies  are  recorded  from  Celebes,  but 
in  the  Malaysian  subrcgion  only  two  subspecies  occur  : — 

D.  a.  albata  Zinck.  Java. 

D.  a.  adustata  Fruhst,  West  Sumatra. 

15.  Danaida  luzonensis  Feld.  praemacaristus  Fruhst. 

Dnnaida  liizonensi.s  praemacarislus  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  209,  flg.  78c. 

Distrib.     Borneo. 

The  only  two  Malaysian  subspecies  of  D.  luzonensis 
are  : — 

D.  I.  praemacaristus  Fruhst.  Borneo. 

D.  I.  larissa  Feld.  Java.' 

Subgenus  Parantica,  Moore. 

a.  Fuscous  streak  in  cell  of  hind  wing  as  heavy 
as,  or  heavier  than,  the  hyaline  streaks  in 
cell  eryx. 

a\    Cell  of  hind  wing  hyaline  partially  divided 

by  thin  fuscous  line  melanoides. 

16.  Danaida  eryx  Fab.  eryx  Fab. 

Danaida  eryx  eryx  i-'ruhstorfer  1909,  p.  207,  flg.  77b  (as  aglaioides). 
Danaida  eryx  maenius  Fruhstorfer  1909,  p.  207. 
Danais  agleoides  Distant  1882,  p.  15,  Tab.  I,  flg.  5. 

A  very  common  species  ranging  throughout  the  Malay 
Peninsula  ;  extending  north  through  Siam  to  Burma  and 
Cochin-China  and  south  to  Sumatra  and  Borneo.  Three 
distinct  subspecies  in  addition  to  the  typical  form  may  be 
recognized  ;  they  occur  in  ihc  Malaysian  region  :- 

D.  e.  borneensis  Staud.  Borneo. 

D.  e.  furius  Fruhst.  Java. 

D.  e.  erycina  Fruhst.  Nias  I. 

Fruhstorfer  recognizes  two  subspecies  from  Borneo — 
borneensis  from  South-east  Borneo  and  Pontianak,  terilus 
from  North  Borneo  ;  both  melanic  forms,  the  latter  parti- 
cularly so,  due  to  the  great  reduction  of  the  pale  green 
stripes  and  spots.  As  both  occur  together  in  the  same 
localities  in  Sarawak  I  prefer  to  recognize  but  one  sub- 
species,  borneensis  from   Borneo,-  retainiiii?;   terilus  as  a 


'  PiEPKRS,  1913,  p.  25,  pi.  XIII,  figs.  20a,  20b.  as  "  Danais  aglea 
Cramer." 

'MouLTON,  1915,  p.  202,  where  the  Bornean  form  is  incorrectly 
given  as  eryx. 


170  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

form  name  for  particularly  black  specimens.  Sarawak 
specimens  of  this  terilus  form  are  practically  inseparable 
from  enjcina  from  Nias.  The  two  post-cellular  streaks  are 
not  quite  so  obliterated  in  two  Sarawak  males,  while  the 
upper  cell  streak  and  the  two  below  the  cell  are  more  so 
in  one  of  them. 

Rolhscliild'  records  a  female  from  the  West  Coast  of 
Sumatra  as  enjx.  Fruhstorfer's  subspecies  maenius  for 
this  part  of  Sumatra  is  probably  therefore  only  a  melanic 
form  occurring  together  with  the  typical  form,  which  in 
Sumatra  is  apparently  inseparable  from  eryx  of  the  Malay 
Peninsula  and  Siam.  The  Bornean  subspecies  differs 
consistently  from  eryx  in  the  general  reduction  of  the  pale 
green  markings  and  particularly  in  the  upper  cell  streak  of 
the  fore  wing  and  the  submarginal  row  of  spots  in  both 
wings,  which  are  always  smaller  and  less  developed. 

17.     Danaida  aglea  Cr.  melanoides  Moore. 

Danatda  aglea  grammica  Fruhstorfer  1909,  p.  208. 
Danaia  aglea  Distant  1882.  p.  13. 

Loc.  Pahang  :  Senyum — Kota  Tongkat,  1  5  June-July 
(F.M.S.  Mus.). 

Distrib.  North  India  from  Kashmir  to  Burma,  Tenas- 
serim  and  Siam,  with  subspecies  in  Tonkin  and  Formosa. 
The  typical  form  aglea  is  restricted  to  Ceylon,  South  and 
Central  India. 

Bingham-  notes  that  de  Niceville's  ligure  •  of  aylea 
is  tliat  of  the  northern  form  melanoides.  The  Pahang 
specimen  agrees  well  with  the  markings  of  this  figure, 
but  differs  in  being  smaller  with  narrower  fore 
wings.  Bingham,  however,  notices  that  the  wings  of 
melanoides  are  longer  and  narrower  than  in  typical  aglea. 
Godfrey*  records  melanoides  as  widely  distributed  and 
fairly  common  in  Siam.  Two  Siamese  specimens,  kindly 
sent  to  me  by  Godfrey,  seem  inseparable  from  Indian 
melanoides,  although  the  male  agrees  with  the  Pahang  male 
in  being  slightly  smaller,  with  the  fore  wing  narrower  than 
in  the  Indian  male  figured  by  de  Niceville.  This  character 
is  evidently  variable,  as  in  a  series  of  12  males  in  the  F.M.S. 
Mus.  from  Pulau  Condore  the  expanse  of  wings  varies 
from  61-78  mm.  The  fore  wing  from  anal  angle  to  centre 
of  costa  varies  from  19-22  mm.  in  this  series.  The  only 
female  from  this  locaUty  is  rather  darker  than  the  Siamese 
form. 


•  Rothschild,  1920,  p.  147. 
"  Bingham,  1905,  p.  18. 

'  DE  Niceville,  1882,  p.  38,  pi.  6,  fig.  7. 

*  Godfrey,  1916,  p.  118. 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  171 

It  is  interesting  to  note  that  Criiger^  mentioned  D.  aglea 
in  a  short  description  of  Malacca  butterflies  as  long  ago  as 
1878.  Distant^  threw  doubt  on  the  record,  and  apparently 
the  occurrence  of  aglea  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  has  re- 
mained unconfirmed  until  now. 

Although  de  Niceville  {I.e.)  shows  clearly  enough  that 
grammica  Boisd.  (1836)  must  be  restricted  to  the  Ceylon 
and  South  Indian  form  which  Cramer  described  as  aglea 
in  1781  and  with  which  it  is  therefore  synonymous,  never 
theless  Fruhstorfer  ^  retains  Boisduval's  name  for  the  North 
Indian  form.  I  follow  Bingham,*  Evans  ^  and  Godfrey  *  in 
adopting  melanoides  Moore  (1883)  for  this  northern  form. 

Subgenus  Ravadeba,  Moore. 
The    only    species    of    this    subgenus    found    in    the 
Malaysian  subregion  is  distinguished  at  once  from  all  other 
Danaines  by  the  canary-yellow  discal  region  of  the  hind 
wing. 

18.     Danaida  aspasia  Fab.  aspasia  Fab. 

Danaida  aspasia  aspasia  Fruhstorfer  1909,  p.  205,  flg.  76d. 
Dnnaida  aspasia  var.  crorea  Distant  1882,  p.  13,  Tab.  I,  flg.  7. 

A  common  species  found  throughout  the  Malay  Penin- 
sula, ranging  from  low  country  to  the  mountains  up  to 
3,()()()  ft.,  and  probably  higher.  Apparently  on  the  wing  all 
the  year  round. 

The  typical  form  also  occurs  in  Tenasserim,  Siam, 
Sumatra'  and  Palawan.  Other  subspecies  are  recognized, 
all  occurring  in  the  Malaysian  subregion  : — 

D.  a.  Philomela  Zink.  .lava. 

D.  a.  rita  Fruhst.  liawean  I. 

D.  a.  chnjsea  Dob.  Kngano  I. 

D.  a.  caiilonia  Fruhst.  Pulau  Tello,  Batu  Is. 

D.  a.  kheili  Staudg.  Xias  I. 

D.  a.  shelfordi  Fruhst.  Borneo. 

Piepers  and  Snellen  regard  the  Javan  form  as  aspasia. 
It  is,  as  recognized  by  Fruhstorfer,  quite  distinct  from  the 
Malay  Peninsula  aspasia  and  must  be  known  as  philomela. 
The  males  have  the  three  large  post-cellular  patches  yellow, 
while  in  aspasia  they  are  hyaline,  the  lowest  and  largest 
patcli  alone  being  tinged  with  yellow.  This  seems  to  be 
a  constant  feature  of  distinction  in  the  males.  In  the  female 
philomela  the  post-cellular  sub-apical  wJiite  streaks  are 
much  shorter  and  broader  than  in  female  aspasia. 

Tlie  Bornean  subspecies  shelfordi  is  also  well-marked 
and  distinct. 

'  Cruger,  1878,  p.  29.  ~~  ~ 

•Distant,  1882,  p.  13. 
'Fruhstorfer,  1909,  p.  208. 

*  Bingham,  1905,  p.  19. 
°  Evans,  1912,  p.  560. 
"Godfrey,  1916,  p.  118. 

•  Fruhstort'cr's  .sul).species  tburiialiu  lor  Wesiern  Sumatra  is 
not  recognized  by  Rothschild  (1920). 


172  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol    X, 

Subgenus  Tirumala,  Moore. 

The  males  of  this  subgenus  are  distinguished  by  a 
prominent  flap-like  scent  patch  on  the  underside  of  the 
hind  wing.  The  two  Malaysian  species  may  be  further  re- 
cognized by  the  absence  of  white  spots  in  the  hmd  wing 
in  the  angles  formed  by  the  bases  of  the  median  nervuies. 
These  angles  are  delineated  by  tine  whitish  lines  in 
Tirumala. 

a.    Sub-hyaline  spots  and  lines  bluish  and 

much  reduced  septentrionis. 

n\    Sub-hyaline  spots  and  lines  whitish  and 

large  limniace. 

19.  Danaida  melissa  Cr.  seplentrionis  Butl. 

DdiKtidii  nieli.ssd  scplenlriom's  Friilistorfer  1009,  p.   202 
Danais  septentrionis  Distant  1882,  p.  16,  Tab.  I,  flg.  9. 

Loc.  S.W.  Siam  :  Hat  Sanuk  and  Tasan  ;  Perak  : 
Maxwell's  Hill  and  Kuala  Kangsar  ;  Negri  Sembilan  :  Bukit 
Tangga  (F.M.S.  Mus.).  Perak  :  Kuala  Lenggong  (F.M.S. 
Agric.  Dept.). 

Out  of  18  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums,  16  are  males 

Distrib.  India  to  Cochin-China,  Siam,  the  Malay 
Peninsula  and  Sumatra.    Other  Malaysian  subspecies  are : — 

D.  ni.  melissa  Cr.  Java. 

D.  m.  rufiventris  Fruhst.  Nias  I. 

D.  m.  microsticta  Butl.  Borneo. 

D.  m.  suanetes  Fruhst.  Balabac  I. 

Several  other  subspecies  range  further  East  as  far  as 
Fiji  and  the  New  Hebrides. 

20.  Danaida  limniace  Cr.  limniace  Cr. 

A  single  male  in  the  Raffles  Museum,  unfortunately 
without  locality  label,  may  perhaps  constitute  the  first 
record  of  this  species  from  the  Malay  Peninsula,  since  the 
greater  part  of  the  buttertly  collection  in  this  Museum 
comes  from  that  country. 

Godfrey  ^  records  typical  limniace  from  Siam  (Lat. 
13'  N.)  as  "  not  very  common.  Taken  only  on  the 
Petchaburi  River  and  in  the  Sriracha  forest." 

The  Raffles  Museum  specimen  agrees  well  with  a 
Siamese  male  kindly  sent  to  me  by  Godfrey  and  with 
Bingham's  description  and  figure  of  the  Indian  form.^ 


*  Godfrey,  1916,  p.  118. 

'  Bingham,  1905,  p.  16,  flg.  5. 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  173 

Fiuhstorfer '  comments  on  the  cmious  gap  in  its  dis- 
tribution between  the  Nicobars  and  Java.  Since  then, 
liowever,  I  have  recorded  it  from  Borneo-;  one  would 
expect  to  find  it  yet  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  and  Sumatra. 
The  Malaysian  subspecies  are  : — 

D.  I.  limniace  Cr.  China  south  to  Slam  and 

?  Malay  Peninsula. 
D.  I  conjuncta  Moore  Java. 

D.  I.  knchingana  Moulton  Borneo- 

Other  subspecies  occur  in  India,  Ceylon  and  Celebes. 
Piepers^  merges  limniace  with  melissa  and  records 
intermediates  in  Java. 

Subgenus  Anosia,  Hubn. 

21.  Danaida  archippus  Fab. 

Danaida  archippus   Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.   193. 

Loc.    Penang  and  Java  (Fruhstorfer). 

I  have  seen  none  in  local  collections.  Piepers*  doubts 
its  occurrence  in  Java.  This  American  butterfly,  well- 
known  as  "  The  Wanderei,"  has  reached  many  other  coun- 
tries in  the  East  besides  the  two  Malaysian  localities  given 
by  Fruhstorfer. 

Subgenus  Limnas,  Hiibn. 

The  Malay  Peninsula  species  of  this  subgenus  and  the 
next  are  distinguished  from  all  the  fore-going  Danaines  by 
the  fulvous  ground-colour  of  the  fore  wing.  This  Limnas 
species  may  be  recognized  by  the  colouration  of  the  veins 
which  are  fulvous  like  the  ground-colour,  not  heavily 
defined  in  black  as  in  the  species  of  the  next  subgenus, 
Danaida. 

22.  Danaida  chrysippus  Linn,  hataviana  Moore. 

Danaida  chrysippus  bulaviana  Frulistorfer  1910,  p.  191. 
Danaia  chrysippus  Distant  1882-86,  pp.  20,  408,  Tab.  I,  llg.  10  &  XL, 
flg.   13. 

Loc.  Selangor  :  Kuala  Selangor  and  Kuala  Lumpur 
(F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.).    Singapore  1  ^ ,  3  ?  9   (Raffles  Mus.). 

Fruhstorfer  records  the  lighter  yellow  continental 
Indian  form  chrysippus  in  North-East  Sumatra.  Godfrey^ 
records  it  as  "  common  everywhere  all  the  year  round " 
in  Siam.  Distant  (I.e.)  records  it  from  Penang,  Province 
Wellesley  and  Singapore.  It  is  apparently  rare  in  the  Malay 
Peninsula.    I  have  seen  none  from  local  collections. 

Distant  also  records  a  variety  with  whitish  hind  wings, 
alcippoides,  from  Singapore.  The  F.M.S.  Agricultural 
Department  have  a  series  of  this  white  form  from  Kuala 
Lumpur,  bred  from  larvae  found  on  a  large  Calotropis 

'  Fruhstoiifeh,  1909,  p.  204.  ^  ^ 

^AIoULTOx,  1915(a),  p.  97. 

M^iEPERs,  1913,  p.  30,  pi.  XIV,  figs.  2oa,  25b,  25c. 

'  PiEPEus,  1913,  p.  23. 

'  Godfrey,  1916,  p.  117. 


174  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

growing  in  the  Agricultural  Department  Plantation  in  Jan- 
uary 1919.  They  agree  well  with  Distant's  figure  of  a  Singa- 
pore male,  except  that  the  white  expanse,  the  hind-marginal 
row  of  white  spots  in  the  hind  wing  and  the  two  white 
spots  in  the  outer  orange-brown  region  of  the  fore  wing 
are  more  developed. 

The  record  of  the  dark  brown  bataviana  in  Singapore 
and  Kuala  Selangor  (1  9  )  is  of  interest  in  view  of  its 
occurrence  also  in  Western  Sumatra.  The  Singapore  male 
agrees  well  with  a  male  from  Java. 

The  distribution  of  chrysippus  in  Malaysia  is  as 
follows  : — 

D.  c.  chrysippus  Linn.  Malay    Peninsula,    Borneo, 

N.  E.  Sumatra. 
D.  c.  vigeli  Heyl.  Pulau  Bras  (N.  W.  Sumatra). 

D.  c.  clarippus  Weym.  Nias  I. 

D.  c.  bataviana  Moore  Java,  W.  Sumatra  and  Malay 

Peninsula    (Singapore   and 
Kuala  Selangor). 

Other  subspecies  extend  the  range  of  this  species  to 
Europe,  Africa  and  Australia. 

In  tiie  Malaysian  subregion  the  white  form  alcippoides 
is  known  from  Siunatra,  as  well  as  from  Singapore  and 
Kuala  Lumjjur. 

Subgenus  Danaida,  Latr. 

The  Malay  Peninsula  forms  may  be  separated  thus  :— 

a.     Orange-brown    ground-colour    below    sub- 
median  nervure  of  fore  wing  above  plexippus. 

b.    Ground-colour  of  hind  wing  pale  orange- 
brown  /.  typica. 
b\    Ground-colour  of  hind  wing  white            /.  intermedia. 

b\  Ground-colour  of  hind  wing  pale  orange- 
brown,  very  slightly  suffused  with 
white  /.  comiectens. 

a\   Brown  fuscous  below  sub-median  nervure 
of  fore  wing. 

b.    Cell  and  post-discal  streaks  of  hind  wing 

white  hegesippus, 

b^.   Only  the  outer  half  of  cell  of  hind  wing 

white,  no  post-discal  white  streaks         malayana. 

23.     Danaida  plexippus  Linn,  plexippus  Linn. 

Danaida  plexippus  intermedia  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  195. 
Danais  gennlia  Distant  1882-86,  pp.  18,  408,  Tab.  11,  figs.  2,  3. 

Loc.  S.W.  Siam  :  Hat  Saniik  and  Tasan  ,  Perak  : 
Kuala  Kangsar,  Taiping  ,  Selangor  :  Ulu  Gonibak,  Ulu 
Langat,  Kuala  Lumpur  ;  i^ahang  :  Kuala  Tahan  ;  Negri 
Sembilan  :  Bukit  iangga  (F.M.S.  Mus.).  Singapore 
(Raffles  Mus.). 


1921]  MouLTON  :   Malaysian  Butterflies.  175 

Distrib.  India  to  China  and  the  Malay  Peninsula,  with 
subspecies  scattered  through  the  Malay  Archipelago  to 
Australia.     Those  recognized  from  Malaysia  are  ■  — 

D.  p.  plexippus  Linn.  Malay  Peninsula 

D.  p.  sumatrana  Moore  Sumatra.  '-        ^ 

D.  p.  niasiciis  Fruhst.  Nias  I. 

D.  p.  intensa  Moore  Borneo,  Java,  Bali,  Bawean. 

The  forms  with  white,  instead  of  fulvous,  ground- 
colour in  the  hind  wing  should  be  known  as  form  inter- 
media Moore.  They  occur  together  with  the  typical  fulvous 
hind-winged  form  in  Tonkin,  Saigon,  Siara  and  the  Malay 
Peninsula,  and  therefore  cannot  be  regarded  as  a  separate 
subspecies.  Distant  ^  recognized  this  in  1886,  but 
Fruhslorfer  ^  records  intermedia  as  a  "  geographical  rac  '  " 
confined  to  the  Malay  Peninsula  and  Singapore  (where  he 
states  it  is  the  principal  form)  and  as  an  "  aberration " 
occurring  in  the  dry  season  in  Siam,  Saigon  and  Tonkin. 

It  seems  to  me  preferable  to  reserve  subspecific  names 
for  geographical  races  inhabiting  separate  areas.  In  this 
case  two  well-marked  forms  occur  together  over  a  wide 
range  of  country.  To  recognize  them  by  form  names 
rather  than  as  distinct  subspecies  appears  to  me  the  sounder 
policy.  If  one  were  a  resident  form  and  the  other  a  visitor, 
as  occurs  in  some  species  of  birds,  {e.g.  the  Eastern  Roller, 
Eurijstomus  orientalis  Linn.,  which  has  the  typical  form 
orienlalis  resident  in  Malaysia,  and  a  migi*atory  subspecies 
calonijx,  which  is  also  found  at  certain  times  of  the  year  in 
Malaysia  together  witli  orientali.s),  subspecific  distinction 
would  be  justified.  There  is,  however,  no  evidence  to  sho\i' 
that  either  form  of  plea'ippus  is  an  occasional  visitor  to  our 
subregion.  It  is  to  be  supposed  in  fad  that  tbe  two  forms 
will  occur  in  one  brood.  A  breeding  experiment  to  test 
this  would  be  of  interest.  On  the  other  hand  it  might  be 
argued  with  some  justice  that  individuals  which  produce 
dimorphic  broods  in  one  area  are  subspecifically  distinct 
from  individuals  in  another  area  where  only  one  pattern 
of  progeny  is  produced,  not  two. 

One  male  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums  from  Kuala  Kangsar 
has  a  very  slight  development  of  white  in  the  discal  region 
of  the  hind  M'ing  above  and  is  thus  intermediate  between 
the  typical  forni  with  completely  fulvous  hind  wing  and 
the  white  hind  winged  form  intermedia.  This  form  may 
be  termed  connectens  f .  nov. 

23.     Danaida  plexippus  Linn,  intensa  Moore. 

Danaida  plexippus  inlensa  Frulistorfer  1910,  p.    195. 

The  distribution  of  this  subspecies,  viz.  Borneo,  Java, 
Bali  and  Bawean,  is  rather  curious. 


'  Distant,  1886,  p.  408. 

'  Fruhstorfer,  1910,  p.  185. 


176  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

A  female  from  Mt.  Kinabalii,  British  North  Borneo, 
in  the  Raffles  Museum,  is  very  similar  to  one  from  the 
island  of  Krakatau  (between  Java  and  Sumatra)  in  the 
Buitenzorg  Museum.  The  white  spots  in  the  hind-margin 
of  the  hind  wing  are  slightly  more  pronounced  above  and 
below  in  the  latter  specimen  and  in  two  males  from  the 
same  locality. 

24.     Danaida  melanippus  Cr.  hegesippus  Cr. 

Danaida  melanippus  beyesippns  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.   196. 

Danais  melanippus  var.  hegesippiis  Distant  1882,  p.  19,  Tab.  H,  fig.  1. 

A  common  form  throughout  the  Malay  Peninsula, 
Sumatra,  Borneo  and  the  Natuna  Islands,  with  other  sub- 
species ranging  as  far  as  India,  Java  and  Celebes.  In 
Malaysia  the  following  subspecies  are  recognized  : — 

D.  m.  melanippus  Cr.  Java. 

D.  m.  hegesippiis  Cr.  Malay    Peninsula,    Borneo, 

Suinatra  and  Xatur.a  Is. 

D.  m.  iimbrosiis  Friihst.  Pulaii  Telle,  Hatu  Is. 

D.  m.  eurifdice  Butl.  Nias  I. 

D.  m.  keteiis  Hag.  Mentawei  Is. 

D.  fii.  pietersi  Doh.  Knaano  I. 

D.  w.  insnlaris  Moiilton  Krakatau  I. 

Of  60  specimens  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums,  43  are  males, 
17  females.  In  tlie  Raffles  Museum  there  are  11  males  and 
3  females.     Apparently  on  the  wing  all  the  year  round. 

Tliere  is  a  melanistic  tendency  noticeable  in  the  hind 
wings  of  certain  males  which  have  the  white  post-ceUular 
streaks,  especially  those  immediately  above  the  scent-patch, 
much  reduced.  These  are  typical  hegesippus,  but  there  are 
several  examples  in  the  above  series  which  agree  admirably 
with  Fruhstorfer's  figure  of  D.  m.  indicus.'  This  form  he 
lestricts  to  Tenasserim,  Burma,  Bengal  and  Cochin-China. 
(iodfrey  -  regards  the  Siamese  form  as  hegesippus.  The 
three  he  sends  me  are  typical  hegesippus,  differing  particu- 
larly from  Fruhstorfer's  figure  of  indicus  in  the  reduced 
sub-apical  white  markings  of  the  fore  wing.  I  doubt 
whether  the  Indian  form  can  be  maintained  as  a  separate 
subspecies. 

24a.     Danaida  melanippus  Cr.  insulan's  subsp.  nov 

Differs  from  .lavan  mehinippus  in  the  hind  wing, 
which  is  noticeable  for  its  white  cell,  contrasting  with  three 
pale  ferruginous  streaks  bordering  the  submedian  and 
internal  neivurcs.  The  post-cellular  streaks  are  white  and 
much  reduced,  but  shaded  posteriorly  with  ferruginous 
scales  ;  the  white  spots  of  the  hind-marginal  border  are 
reduced.  The  whole  of  the  discal  region  of  the  hind  wing 
below  is  pale  ferruginous,  not  white  as  in  hegesippus. 

'  Fruhstorfer,  1910,  p.  196,  fig.  77o. 
Godfrey,  1916,  p.  117. 


1921]  MouLTON  :   Malaysian  Butterflies.  177 

This  Krakatau  form  suggests  a  possible  hybrid  between 
hegesippus  and  melanippm.  Possibly  stragglers  of 
melanippiis  from  Java  and  hegesippus  from  Sumatra  have 
reached  Krakatau  since  the  great  eruption  and  have  given 
rise  to  this  new  race. 

From  the  Engano  form  pietersi'  it  is  easily  distin- 
guished. That  form  has  a  brown  cell  centre  and  brown 
inter-nervular  streaks  on  the  hind  wing  ;  there  is  also  a 
powdering  of  grej-violet  on  the  white  sub-apical  patches 
of  the  fore  wing  which  is  absent  in  insularis. 

Exp.  al.  67  mm. 

Type  6  .  Krakatau,  December  1919.  In  Zoological 
Museum,  Buitenzorg,  Java. 

25.     Danaida  affinis  Fab.  malaijaua  Fruhst. 

Danaida  afflnis  malayana  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  201,  flg.  lid. 
Danais  abigar  Distant  1880.  p.  409.  Tab.  XUI,  flg.  11. 

Loc.  Selangor  :  Kuala  Selangor,  2$  $ ,  (F.M.S.  Agric. 
Dept.).     Johorc  1  s  .     (Raffles  Mus.). 

Distrib.  This  subspecies  is  confined  to  Siam  and  the 
Malay  Peninsula.  The  species,  however,  has  a  wide  range 
extending  east  and  south  to  the  Philippines,  Australia  and 
the  Solomon  Islands.     The  Malaysian  forms  are  :  — 

/).  (I.  fiiliginosj  Hag.  Rawean  i. 

I).  (I.  artenice  Cr.  .lava. 

I),  a.  malayana  Fruhst.  Malay     .Peninsula      (and 

Siam). 

Fruhstorfer  (I.e.)  states  that  for  a  decade  only  one 
male  was  known  "  whose  locality,  the  Malay  Peninsula, 
was  moreover  still  doubtful."  The  record  of  a  male  from 
Johore  and  two  more  from  Kuala  Selangor  is  therefore  of 
interest.  Distant  {I.e.)  records  its  discovery  in  Province 
Wellesley.  The  Kuala  Selangor  males  agree  well  with 
Fruhstorfer's  figure  and  with  Siamese  males  kindly  sent  to 
me  for  comparison  by  Godfrey.  Distant's  figure  of  the 
Province  Wellesley  female  agrees  with  Siamese  females, 
except  that  the  white  discal  region  of  the  hind  wing  is  not 
so  sharply  defined  in  his  figure. 

The  Johore  male  in  the  Raffles  Museum  differs  so  much 
from  malayana  that  one  is  tempted  to  give  this  southern 
lorm  siibspeciiic  distinction.  I  jjrefer,  however,  to  keep 
it  provisionally  under  malayana  until  the  female  and  more 
males  are  collected.  The  white  discal  region  of  the  hind 
wing  is  much  restricted  as  in  Fruhstorfer's  figure  of  tam- 
hora  (fig.  77d.),  the  outer  half  is  brown,  with  the  veins 
slightly  emphasized  with  darker  biown,  not  black  ;  the  sex- 
mark  does  not  penetrate  the  white  discal  region  as  in 
malay(uia.  Ihe  basal  lialf  of  the  cell  in  the  hind  wing  l.s 
brown,  whereas  in  malayana  this  brown  colouring  seldom 


'DOHEHTY,  1891,  p.  23,  pi.  I,  flg.  1. 


178  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

covers  so  much  as  the  basal  third.  The  Ught  spots  formmg 
a  double  hind-marginal  border  to  the  hind  wing  are  smallei 
liian  u?  malaijana  and  the  inner  row  is  incomplete  on  the 
upper  side. 

Fruhstorfer  states  that  malayana  is  fairly  numerous 
in  Bangkok,  and  that  it  will,  in  his  opinion,  certainly  extend 
still  further  along  the  coast  of  Siam. 

25«.     Danaida  afiinis  Fab.  artenice  Cr. 

lianaida  afjlnis  arlentce  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  200. 

Fruhstorfer  comments  on  the  rarity  of  this  form. 
The  Director  of  the  Zoological  Museum,  Buitenzorg,  has 
sent  me  for  examination  three  males  and  one  female  from 
Purmerend  and  Edam,  Batavia  Bay.  They  agree  weU  with 
Piepers'  figure  ^  ;  they  measure  55-65  mm.  across  the  wings 
against  50  mm.  recorded  by  Fruhstorfer.  Piepers^  states 
it  is  common  in  the  low^er  districts  of  Batavia. 

The  subgenus  Danciida  contains  one  other  species  from 
the  Malaysian  subregion  in  addition  to  the  above. 

26.     Danaida  lotis  Cr.  lotis  Cr. 

Danaida  lotis  lotis  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.    197. 

Distiih.  Borneo,  with  other  subspecies  from  Celebes 
and  the  Philippines.     The  only  Malaysian  subspecies  are  : — 

D.  I.  lotis  Cr.  Borneo. 

D.  I.  mezentiiis  Fruhst.  N.  E.  Borneo  and  Balabac  I. 

/)   /.  lotina  Fruhst.  Natuna  Is. 

Genus  Ei  ploea,  Fab. 

The  following  key,  which  is  based  on  male  characters 
only  and  therefore  does  not  apply  to  females,  will  serve  to 
distinguish  the  ditterent  subgenera,  or  "  groups "  as 
Fruhstorfer  regards  them,  into  w^hich  this  genus  is 
divided  : — 

a.     Without   pale   patch   of   specialized   scales 
in  the  costal  rei'ion  of  hind  wing. 
b.     Without  sexual  brand  on  fore  wing  Menama. 

l)\  With  one  well-detined  sexual  brand  be- 
tween median  and  internal  nervures  of 
fore  wing  Crastia. 

b\  With  two  well-defined  sexual  brands  be- 
tween median  and  internal  nervures  of 
fore  wing  Stictoploea. 

a\    With  pale   patch   of  specialized   scales  in 
the  costal   region   of  the  hind  wing  of 
the  male. 
b.     Patch  quite  small,  in  cell  of  hind  wing 
below    the    origin    of    first    subcostal 
nervule  Trepsichrois. 


PiEPEus.  1913,  p.  33,  pi.  XIV,  fig.  26. 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  179 

b'.  Patch  larj^e,  covering  half  or  more  than 
half  the  upper  portion  of  ceil  in  hind 
wing. 

c.  Fore  wing  beneath  without  sexual 
spot  below  first  median  nervule. 

d.    Fore    wing    rounded.     Exp, 

al.  65-70  mm.  Calliploea. 

d\    Fore    wing    more    pointed. 

Exp.  al.  105-110  mm.  Macroploea. 

c\  Fore  wing  beneath  with  small 
patch  of  specialized  scales  below 
first  median  nervule  Salpinx. 

Subgenus  Menama,  Moore. 

Fruhstorf  er  ^  merges  this  subgenus  under  the  one 
group  Crastia.  Tlie  absence  of  any  sexual  brand  in  the 
male,  however,  seems  to  justify  subgeneric  separation  of 
the  three  species  thus  characterized  from  those  in  which 
there  are  one  or  more  well-defined  sexual  brands.  I  there- 
fore follow  Bingham^  in  retainmg  this  subgenus  distinct 
from  the  subgenus  Cra.slia.  De  Niccville^  follows  Butler* 
in  using  Hubner's  name  Crastia  for  the  species  here  placed 
under  the  subgenus  Menama,  i.e.  those  characterized  by 
the  absence  of  a  sexual  brand  in  the  male. 

The  remaining  species  included  by  Fruhstorfer  in  his 
group  Crastia,  and  by  Butler  and  de  Niceville  in  their 
groups  Eiiploea,  Bingham  refers  to  his  subgenus  Crastia  ; 
a  course  which  I  adopt  here. 

The  species  of  Menama  found  in  the  Malay  Peninsula 
may  be  distinguished  as  follows  : — 

a.  Colouring  above  black  fuscous  without  purple 
iridescence  ;  hind-margin  fore  wing  with 
white  spots,  hind-margin  hind  wing  with 
double  row  of  small  while  spots. 

b.     Sub-apical  spots  in  fore  wing  large.     Exp. 

al.  88-98  mm.    Apex  fore  wing  roundea     marsdeni. 
b\    Sub-apical   spots   in    fore   wing  not  large, 

very  slightly  more  pronounced  than  inner 

row  of  post-discal  white  spots.     Exp.  al. 

110-118  mm.  malayica. 

a\  Fore  wing  deep  iridescent  blue-purple  on 
black,  without  spots  in  male  and  only  a 
few  small  sjiots  in  female,  hind  wing  both 
sexes  marked  with  double  row  of  sub- 
marginal  spots,  those  of  the  inner  row 
elongate  and  heavier  modesia. 

27.     Euploea  crameri  Luc.  marsdeni  Moore. 

Euploea  crameri  marsdeni  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  2.30. 
Euploea  bremeri  Distant  1882,  p.  23,  Tab.  U,  flg.  4. 
Euploea  marsdeni  Distant  188(5,  p.  411,  Tab.  XXXIX,  flg.  1. 


'Fruhstorfer,  1910,  p.  226. 
'  Bingham,  1905,  p.  23. 
'  De  Niceville,  1882,  p.  58. 
*  Butler,  1878,  p.  297. 


180  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  Vol.  X, 

Loc.  Langkawi  Islands ;  Kedah  :  Kedah  Peak ,  Tioman 
Island  ;  Selangor  :  Ulu  Langat  (F.M.S.  Mus.) .  Singapore 
(Distant). 

Distrib.     The  type  form  crameri  comes  from  Borneo. 

The  species  is  reduced  to  several  subspecies  ranging  from 
India  through  Malaysia  as  far  East  as  Bali.  The  Malaysian 
subspecies  are  : — 

E.  c.  crameri  Luc.  Borneo. 

E.  c.  marsdeni  Moore  Malay  Peninsula. 

E.  c.  heylaertsi  Moore  Sumatra. 

E.  c.  niasica  Moore  Mas  I. 

E.  c.  mentavica  Hag.  Mentawei  Is. 

E.  c.  tenggerensis  Fruhst.  East  Java  (Tengger  Mts.). 

E.  c.  snelleni  Moulton  West  and  Central  Java. 

E.  c.  pagciistecheri  Hag.  Bawean  I. 

E.  c.  singaradha  Fruhst.  Bali. 

E.  c.  lanista  Fruhst  Xatuna  Is. 

E.  c.  jedja  Fruhst.  Banguey  I. 

The  Tenasserim  subspecies  bremeri  and  the  Sumatran 
heylaertsi  appear  to  me  hardly  separable  from  the  Malay 
Peninsula  marsdeni. 

The  two  males  from  Langkawi  Islands  do  not  differ 
from  the  mainland  form.  The  only  male  from  Tioman 
Island  on  the  other  hand  is  noticeable  for  the  almost  total 
suppression  of  the  hind-marginal  border  of  white  spots  in 
both  wings.  If  this  reduction  is  normal  in  males  from  that 
island,  subspecific  separation  would  certainly  be  justified. 
The  two  females  from  Tioman,  however,  do  not  differ  from 
mainland  females. 

27a.     Euploea  crameri  Luc.  sncUeiu'  suhsp.  nov. 

Snellen  ^  notes  that  the  typical  form  crameri  of  Borneo 
*'  differs  from  the  Javanese  form  in  being  larger  (80-82 
mm.  against  70-77  mm.)  and  in  being  of  a  somewhat 
darker  colour.  The  white  spots  on  the  fore  wings,  more- 
over, are  almost  limited  to  the  apex,  being  also  larger." 

As  Piepers  points  out,  these  notes  do  not  agree  with 
Fruhstorfer's  description  of  tenggerensis,  which  we  may 
regard  as  restricted  to  the  Tengger  Mts.  in  East  Java.  For 
the  ordinary  Javanese  form  of  crameri,  which  is  thus 
without  a  name,  I  propose  the  name  snelleni.  Piep^irs  (I.e.) 
figures  both  sexes. 

28.     Euploea  malayica  Bull,  malayica  Butl. 

Euploea  malayica  malayica  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  230,  flg.  80b. 
Euploea  malayica  Distant  1SS2,  p.  22,  Tab.  II,  flg.  7. 

Loc.  Perak  :  Taiping,  Kampar ;  Selangor :  Bukit  Kutu ; 
Pahang  :  Kota  Tongkat  and  Senyum  (F.M.S.  Mus.) . 
Pahang  :  Kuala  Krau,  Jerantut  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.). 
Selangor— -Pahang  :  Semangko  Pass,  2,700  ft.  ;  Singapore 
(Raffles  Mus.) . 


'  Quoted  by  Piepers,  1913,  p.  7,  pi.  XI,  figs.  3a,  3b. 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  181 

Distrib.  With  the  exception  of  one  subspecies  in 
Palawan,  this  species  is  confined  to  the  Malaysian  subregion, 
split  up  into  the  following  subspecies  : — 

E.  m.  malayica  Bull.  Malay  Peninsula  and  Sumatra. 

E.  m.  stoUi  Weym.  Nias  I. 

E.  m.  hy pants  Fruhst.  Java.  ' 

E.  m.  scudderi  Bull.  Borneo. 

E.  m.  roduna  Fruhst.  Banguey  I. 

29.  Euploea  modesta  Butl.  modesta  Butl. 

Eaploea  modesta  modesta  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  231. 

Loc.     S.W.    Siam :    Tasan    and    Hat  Sanuk    4  ^  ^ ; 

Langkawi    Islands    2  $  ?     (F.M.S.    Mus.) .  Perak :    65th 

mile  on  the  Kuala  Kangsar — Grik  Road,  "on  elephant 
dung"  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.^). 

Distrib.  The  typical  form  modesta  has  been  recorded 
from  South  Annam,  Siam  and  Tenasserim  only.  The 
above-mentioned  localities  for  specimens  in  the  F.M.S. 
Museums  and  Agricultural  Department  mark  a  southward 
extension  to  its  range  hitherto  unknown.  Only  two  other 
subspecies,  both  very  distinct,  are  known  : — 

E.  m.  buxtoni  Moore  Sumatra. 

E.  m.  lorzae  Moore  Borneo. 

In  addition  to  the  foregoing  species  of  this  subgenus, 
the  following  occur  in  Malaysia,  although  they  are  not 
represented  in  tlie  Malay  Peninsula  : — 

30.  Euploea  climena  Cr.  sepulchralis  Butl. 

Euploea  climena  .sepulehralis  Fruhstorfer   1910,  p.  226. 
Euploea  climena  terissa  Fruhstorfer  1J)10,  p.  226. 

Distrib.  Java  and  Bawean  Island,  with  the  following 
Malaysian  subspecies  : — 

E.  c.  enganensis  Doh.  En^ano  I. 

E.  c.  elwesiana  de  Nicev.       Bah  (Lonibok  and  Surabawa). 

E.  c.  macleari  Butl.  Christmas  I. 

Piepers^  shows  that  sepulchralis  Butl.  must  cover  the 
forms  from  East  Java,  separated  by  Fruhstorfer  'ds  terissa, 
in  addition  to  those  from  West  Java. 

31.  Euploea  oceanis  Dohert. 

Euploea  oceanis  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  228,  flg.  81c. 

Distrib.    Engano  Island  only. 

32.  Euploea  moorei  Butl.  moorei  Butl. 

Euploea  moorei  moorei  Frulistorfer  1910,  p.  229. 


'  A  specimen  from  the  F.M.S.  Agricultural  Department  is  labelled 
"  P.B.R.  coll.  A."  The  Director  of  the  Department  informs  me  that 
this  is  probably  from  Bukit  Kutu  in  Selangor. 

'PlEPERS,  1913,  p.  4. 


182  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Distrib,  Sumatra,  with  the  following  additional  sub- 
species in  Malaysia  : — 

E.  m.  brookei  Moore  Borneo. 

E.  m.  morrisi  Hag.  Mentawei  Is. 

I  E.  m.  thiemei  Fruhst.  Nias  I. 

33.  Euploea  deheeri  Doh.  lamos  Pruhst. 

Euploea  deheeri  lamos  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  231. 

Distrib.  East  Java,  with  other  subspecies  outside  the 
Malaysian  subregion  from  Lombok,  Sumbawa  and  Flores. 

Subgenus  Crastia,  Hiibn. 

Key  to  the  Malay  Peninsula  forms  : — 

a.    With  marginal  spots  on  fore  wing. 
b.    Inner  row  of  marginal  spots  white  and 

large  graminifera. 

b'.   Marginal    spots    small    or    obsolescent, 

yellowish  ;  apex  of  fore  wing  violaceous    godarti. 
a'.   Without  marginal  spots  on  fore  wing. 

b.  White  streaks  of  sub-marginal  row  in 
hind  wing  above  long,  not  sharply  de- 
fined inwardly. 

,    ,  c.    Male  sexual  brand  on  fore  wing 

small  ;  female  without  white 
spots  on  fore  wing  above.  Exp. 
al.  80-90  mm.  gardineri. 

c\  Male  sexual  brand  on  fore  wing 
larger  ;  female  with  four  white 
spots  on  fore  wing  above.  Exp. 
al.  98-102  ram.  monticola. 

b\  White  streaks  of  sub-marginal  row  in 
hind  wing  above  shorter  and  well-de- 
fined.   Male  sexual  streak  much  larger    menetriesi. 

34.  Euploea  core  Cr.  graminifera  Moore. 

Euploea  core  graminifera  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  230. 
Euploea  distanti  Distant  1882,  p,  32,  Tab   V,  flg.  9,  d", 

Loc.  Singapore  (Raffles  Mus.).  Province  Wellesley 
(Distant).  ^ 

Fruhstorfer  restricts  core  to  India,  with  subspecies 
in  the  Himalayas,  Ceylon  and  the  above  for  the  Malay 
Peninsula.  Moore  ^  gives  no  more  definite  locality  for  his 
type  of  graminifera.  Fruhstorfer  {I.e.)  states  it  is  un- 
known to  him  in  nature. 

Moore  describes  distanti  from  Sumatra  and  gives,  as 
an  additional  locality,  the  Malay  Peninsula  (Province 
Wellesley) .  Fruhstorfer  suggests  that  distanti  is  the  repre- 
sentative of  core  on  Sumatra,  but  he  retains  the  two  as 
separate  species.  The  single  Singapore  male  in  the  Raffles 
Museum  agrees  well  with  Moore's  figure  of  distanti,'  which 
in  turn  is  very  close  to  the  Sumatran  form.     I  think  there- 

'  Moore,  1883,  pp.  277-278,  pi.  XXIX,  fig.  6.  ~ 


1921]  MouLTON  :   Malaysian  Butterflies.  188 

fore  that  it  is  preferable  to  regard  both  graminifera  and 
distanti  as  subspecies  of  the  continental  core.  The 
Malaysian  subregion  thus  has  : — 

E.  c.  graminifera  Moore  Malay  Peninsula. 

E.  c.  distanti  Moore  Sumatra. 

Swinhoe's  circuita  from  Tonkin,  Cochin-China  and 

Siani'  should  also  be  included  as  a  subspecies  of  core. 

35.  Euploea  godarti  Luc. 

Euploea  godarti  Distant  1883,  p.  34,  Tab.  UI,  flg.  8. 

Lac.    Singapore  (coll.  Godman  and  Salvin). 

The  only  known  example  from  the  Malay  Peninsula 
is  recorded  by  Distant,  who  states  that  it  is  labelled 
"  Singapore,"  and  was  received  from  Mr.  Druce. 

Distrit).     Burma,  Tonasserim  and  Siam.- 

36.  Euploea  layardi  Druce. 

Euploea  godarti  layardi  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  23fi. 

Not  recorded  from  the  Malay  Peninsula,  but  common 
in  Siam  and  probably  extending  south  on  the  n^.ainland  to 
Lat.  10°  N. 

A  series  of  16  in  the  F.M.S.  Mus.  from  Pulau  Condore 
(Lat.  9°  N.)  off  the  S.E.  coast  of  Cochin-China  is  referable 
to  this  form,  which  Fruhstorfer  and  Godfrey  unite  with 
the  preceding  species  H.  godarti. 

I  agree  with  Bingham  in  keeping  them  separate,  as 
this  series  difl'ers  imiformly  from  godarti  in  the  sexual 
brand  on  the  fore  wing  of  the  male.  This  is  broader  and 
double  the  length  of  that  in  godarii.  It  further  differs  in 
the  absence  of  a  lilaceous  patch  in  the  apex  of  the  fore  wing 
so  prominent  in  godarti,  and  in  the  straighter  inner  row 
of  submarginal  spots  in  the  hind  wing. 

Godfrey  states  tiiat  godarti  is  very  common  in  Siam, 
but  that  the  form  tai/ardi  is  not.  Breeding  experiments 
to  prove  the  conspecific  identity  of  the  two  forms  are 
needed. 

37.  Euploea  alcathoe  Godl.  gardineri  Fruhst. 

Euploea  alcathoe  gardineri  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p,  237. 
Euploea  menetriest  Distant  1882,  p.  34,  Tab.  lU,  figs.  4,  5. 

Loc.  Kedah  :  Kedah  Peak  ;  Kelantan  :  Kuata  Krai ; 
Perak  :  Batang  Padang,  Kampar  and  Maxwell's  Hill  ; 
Selangor  :  L  lu  Langat  and  Kuala  Lumpur  ;  Pahang  :  Kuala 
Tahan  ;  Negri  Sembilan  :  Bukit  Tangga  (F.M.S.  Mus.). 
Selangor  :  Bukit  Kutu  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.) .  Perak  : 
Gunong  Kledang,  2,646  ft.  ;  Singapore  (Raffles  Mus.). 

S7a.     Euploea  alcathoe  Godt.  monticola  subsp.  nov. 

Diifers  from  gardineri  in  the  larger  size  and  more 
developed  white  sub-marginal  spots  and  streaks  of  the  hind 

'GoDFUEY  records  it  from  Siam  {in  lift,  .ranuarv,  1921^ 
^  Vide  next  species. 


184  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

wing,  and  more  pronounced  sex  brand  in  the  fore  wing  of 
the  male.  The  female  has  four  white  spots  on  the  fore 
wing  above,  one  above  the  apex  of  the  cell,  one  in  the 
lower  distal  corner  of  the  cell,  one  just  beyond  and  one 
just  below  this  cell  spot. 

Exp.  al.   $  100-102  mm.,   $  98  mm. 

Types.  Male  and  female  from  Kedah  Peak  in  F.M.S. 
Museums. 

Loc.  Kedah  :  Kedah  Peak,  November — December 
1915  (F.M.S.  Mus.).  Selangor:  Bukit  Kutu,  3,457  ft., 
AprU  1915  (Raffles  Mus.). 

I  regard  this  with  some  doubt  as  a  mountain  form  of 
alcathoe,  since  there  are  three  other  specimens  in  the  F.M.S. 
Museums  (1,J,  2$  $)  of  the  typical  gardinevi  form  from 
the  same  locality.  It  is  possible  that  these  were  taken  at 
the  foot  of  the  mountain  and  that  monticola  is  restricted 
to  the  higher  altitudes.  The  appearance  of  monticola 
however  is  in  some  ways  so  strikingly  dift'ercnt  from 
gardineri  that  it  may  perhaps  turn  out  to  be  a  distinct 
species. 

Distrih.  E.  alcathoe,  split  into  several  subspecies, 
ranges  from  India  through  Burma,  Siam  and  Malaysia  as 
far  east  as  Lombok.  In  the  Malaysian  subrcgion  the 
following  subspecies  may  be  recognized  :— 

E.  a.  gardineri  Fruhst.  Malay  Peninsula. 

E.  a.  monticola  Moulton  Malay  Peninsula  Mts. 

E.  a.  nmrtimis  Fruhst.'  Sumatra. 

E.  a.  simplex  Fruhst.  Nias  I. 

E.  a.  pahakela  Dob.  EuMano  I. 

E.  a.  arasa  Fruhst.  Menlawei  Is. 

E.  a.  alcathoe  Godt.  .Java,  Bali   (and  l.onibok). 

E.  a.  uniformis  Moore  Borneo. 

E.  a.  salistra  Fruhst.  Natuna  Is. 

E.  a.  lucania  Fruhst.  Puiau  Teilo,  Batu  Is. 

38.     Euploea  deione  Westw.  menetriesi  Feld. 

Kuploea  deione  menetriesi  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  238. 
liiiploea  pinwiUi  Distant  1882,  p.  ;^5,  Tab.  HI,  figs.  9  &  10. 

Loc.  Kedah  :  Gurun  ;  Kelantan  :  Kuala  Krai  ;  Perak  : 
Batang  Padang,  Kampar,  Kuala  Kangsar  and  Taiping  ; 
Selangor:  Ulu  Langat,  Ayer  Itani  (F.M.S.  Mus).  Selan- 
gor— Pahang  :  Semangko  Pass,  2,700  ft.  (Rallies  Mus.). 

Distrih.  This  species  ranges  from  Sikkim,  Burma 
and  Siam  south  through  the  Malayan  Islands  to  Sumbawa 
and  Palawan.  In  the  Malaysian  subregion  the  following 
subspecies  occur  : — 

E.  d.  menetriesi  Feld.  Malay  Peninsula. 

E.  d.  epiphaneia  Fruhst.  Sumatra. 

E.  d.  kneili  Weym.  Nias  I. 

E.  d.  seitzi  Hag.  Mentawei  Is. 

E.  d.  pasina  Fruhst.  Pulau  Tello,  Batu  Is. 

E.  d.  wallengreni  Feld.  .lava. 

E.  d.  zonata  Druce  Borneo. 

E.  d.  masina  Fruhst.  S.  E.  Borneo. 

E.  d.  transpectus  Moore  Billiton. 


'  RoTMscniM),  1920,  ]).   14«  does  not  recognize  vonara  Fruhst. 
for  the  West  Sumatran  form  as  distinct  from  martinus, 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  185 

The  intensive  blue  reflection  in  the  male  in  menetriesi 
is  not  very  noticeable  in  ten  males  from  the  Malay  Penin- 
sula compared  with  the  Siamese  subsijecies  limborgi 
Moore,  of  which  there  is  one  very  beautiful  male  from 
Hat  Sanuk  or  Tasan,  S.W.  Siam,  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums 
One  male  from  Selangor  however  approaches  limborgi  in 
the  more  pronounced  and  better  defined  white  spots  of  the 
hind  wing  above. 

One  other  species  of  this  subgenus  occurs  in  the 
Malaysian  subregion,  viz  : — 

39.  Euploea  haworthi  Luc.  haworthi  Luc. 

Euploea  haworthi  haworthi  Fruhstorfcr  1910,  p.  237. 

Distrih.  The  typical  form  occurs  on  Java  and  Bali 
with  a  subspecies  on  Sumatra  : — 

E.  h.  haivorthi  Luc.  Java  and  Bali. 

E.  h.  inconspicim  Moore  Sumatra. 

Subgenus  Stictoploea,  Butl. 

The  two  sexual  brands  in  the  fore  wing  of  the  male 
and  the  very  deep  blue  reflection  on  the  fore  wings  of  both 
sexes  at  once  make  the  only  Malay  Peninsula  species  of 
this  subgenus  easily  recognizable. 

40.  Euploea  dufresne  Godt.  harrisi  Feld. 

Euploea  harrisi  harrisi  Fruhstorfer  1910.  p.  246. 
Euploea  grotei  Distant  1882,  p.  36.  Tab.  HI,  flg.  3. 
Euploea  harrisi  Distant  1886,  p.  411. 

Loc.  Kedah  :  Kedah  Peak,  1  S  ;  Perak  :  Kuala  Kangsar 
5$  ^,19;  Pahang  :  Senyum  and  Kota  Tongkat,  1  $  (F.M.S. 
Mus.).  Perak  :  Sulphur  Springs,  Grik,  3s  $  (F.M.S.  Agric. 
Dept.).     Singapore  1  9   (Raffles  Mus.). 

Distrih.  This  subspecies  extends  north  to  Siam, 
Burma  and  Cochin-China.^ 

Fruhstorfer  {I.e.)  keeps  as  separate  species  :  harrisi 
for  the  continent,  lacordairei  for  the  Indo-Malayan  islands 
and  dufresne  for  the  Philippine  Islands.  It  seems  to  me 
preferable  to  treat  them  as  one  species,  subspecrfically 
distinct  from  one  another  in  their  own  particular  regions. 
I  therefore  adopt  the  oldest  name  dufresne  Godt.  for  the 
species  instead  of  harrisi.  Fruhstorfer  evidently  inclines 
to  the  same  view,  as  he  writes  :  "  Whether  all  the  three 
species  now  regarded  as  separate  belong  to  one  species  is 
a  question  which  can  only  be  solved  by  further  anatomical 
research."  hi  discussing  Austro-Malayan  forms'  hv  writes: 
"  But  in  spite  of  all  the  statements  to  the  contrary,  there  is 


'  One  example  in  the  F.M.S.  Mus.  from  Pulau  Condore  is 
referable  to  Moore's  melanotic  aberration  croiuleyi  originally 
described  from  Tenasserim. 

*  Fruhstorfer,  1910,  pp.  246-7. 


186 


Journal  of  the  P'.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 


also  in  New  Guinea  as  well  as  in  India  and  on  the  Malayan 
islands  only  one  Stictoploea  in  each  district,  which  excludes 
the  presence  of  a  second  species."  In  his  appendix  to  this 
subfamilj,  however,  published  in  1911^  he  records  a  second 
species  from  the  Phillippines. 

The    Malaysian    subregion    has    the    following    sub- 
species : — 

E.  d.  harrisi  Feld. 


E.  d.  mithrenes  Fruhst. 
E.  d.  convallaria  Thieme 
E.  d.  nica  Fruhst. 
E.  d.  tyrianthina  Moore 
E.  d.  lacordairei  Moore 
E.  d.  baweanica  Fruhst. 


Malay  Peninsula  (to  Siam, 
Burma  and  Cochin-China) . 
Sumatra. 
Nias  I. 
Engano  I. 
Borneo.  ' 

Java. 
Bawean  I. 


Subgenus  Trepsichrois,  Hiibn. 

The  small  patch  of  specialized  scales  in  the  cell  of  the 
hind  wing  in  the  male  and  the  white  inter-nervular  stripes 
of  the  hind  wing  in  the  female  are  two  striking  characters 
which  will  serve  to  distinguish  the  only  Malay  Peninsula 
species  of  this  subgenus. 

41.    Euploea  mulciber  Cr.  mulciber  Cr. 

Euploea  mulciber  mulctbet  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  250. 
Euploea  midamus  Distant  1882,  p.  24.  Tal>.  U,  figs.  8  ft  9. 
Euploea  mulciber  Distant  1882,  p.  29.  Tab.  lU,  figs.  1  ft  2. 

Out  of  156  examples  from  the  F.M.S.  Museums  of  this 
common  and  widely  distributed  butterfly  141  were  males, 
15  females.  In  the  RaflQes  Museum  there  are  29  males 
and  11  females.  Both  series  cover  the  Malay  Peninsula 
from  Kedah  south  to  Singapore.  There  are  none  from 
Tioman  Island  or  Langkawi  Islands  in  these  local  collec- 
tions. 

Distrib.  India  to  China  and  the  Malay  Peninsula, 
with  several  well-marked  subspecies  in  the  Malay  Archi- 
pelago.    Those  occurring  in  the  Malaysian  subregion  are  : — 


E.  m.  mulciber  Cr. 

E.  m.  vandeventeri  Forbes 

£.  m.  verhuelli  Moore 

E.  m.  maassi  Hag. 

E.  m,  battmensis  Fruhst. 

E.  m.  malakoni  Doh. 

E.  m.  basilissa  Cr. 

E.  m.  portia  Fruhst. 


Malay  Peninsula  (to  China 

and  India). 
Sumatra. 
Nias  I. 
Mentawei  Is. 
Batu  Is. 
Engano  1. 

•Tava  and  Bawean  I. 
Borneo  and  Natuna  Is. 


Subgenus  Euploea,  Fab. 

a.    Small  species  with  rounded  fore  wing.    Exp. 

al.  70  mm.  ledererL 

a\   Large  species  with  pointed  fore  wings.    Exp. 

al.  110-120  mm.  ohoebus. 


*  Fruhstorfer,  1911,  pp.  276-277. 


1921]  MouLTON  :   Malaysian  Butterflies.  187 

42.     Euploea  mazares  Moore  ledereri  Feld. 

Euploea  mazares  ledereri  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  252. 
Euploea  ledereri  Distant  1882,  p.  26,  Tab   II,  fig.  10. 

Loc.  S.W.  Siam  :  Hat  Sanuk  ;  Perak  :  Maxwell's 
Hill,  Kuala  Kaiigsar,  Taiping  ;  Selangor  :  Ulu 
Langat ;  Pahang  :  Kuala  Tahan,  Senyum  and  Tongkat ; 
Negri  Sembilan  :  Bukit  Tangga  (F.M.S.  Mus.).  Perak: 
Sulphur  Springs,  Grik,  and  Kuala  Lenggong  ;  Selangor  : 
Ginting  Simpah,  alt.  2,000  ft.  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.) .  Perak 
(Raffles  Mus.). 

A  single  male  in  the  above  series  from  Hat  Sanuk,  S.W. 
Siam,  presumably  forms  the  first  record  of  this  species  for 
Siam,  as  Godfrey  has  not  included  it  in  his  list  published 
in  1916.  Fruhstorfer  says  "it  is  occasionally  met  with  in 
southern  Tenasserim  and  the  Mergui  Archipelago  as  a 
great  rarity." 

E.  mazares  ranges  from  Formosa  to  the  Solomons  with 

the  following  subspecies  in  Malaysia  :- - 

E.  m.  ledereri  Feld.  Malay  Peninsula. 

E.  m.  eunus  de  Nicev.  N.  E.  Sumatra. 

E.  m.  mazqrina  Fruhst.  West  Sumatra. 

E,  m.  mazares  Moore  Java. 

E.  m.  baweana  Fruhst  Bawean  I. 

E.  m.  tmtunensis  Fruhst.  Natuna  Is. 

E.  m.  aristotelis  Moore  North  Borneo. 

E.  m.  cabeira  Fruhst.  S.  E.  Borneo. 

43.     Euploea  corus  Fab.  phoebus  Butl. 

Euploea  corns   phoebus   Fruhstorfer   1910,   p.    258. 
Euploea  caslelnaut  Distant  1882,  p.  24,  Tab.  II.  flg.  6. 

Loc.    Singapore,  26  S   (Raffles  Mus.). 

Distrih.  E.  phoebus  ranges  from  Ceylon  and  Burma 
eastwards  to  Palawan  and  Celebes,  with  the  following  sub- 
species in  Malaysia  : — 

£.  c.  phoebus  Butl.  Malay     Peninsula     (and 

Tenasserim). 

E.  c.  hesiodus  Fruhst.  Banka  I. 

E.  c.  statius  Fruhst.  Sumatra. 

E.  c.  phaeratena  Kheil  Nias  I. 

E.  c.  micronesia  Doh.  Engano  I. 

E,  c.  pavettae  Zink.  Java. 

E.  c.  defiguratus  Fruhst.  Bali, 

E.  c.  nikrion  Fruhst.  Bawean  I. 

E.  c.  butleri  Moore  Borneo. 

The  Siamese  form  is  separated  as  drucei  Moore. 
Fruhstorfer  states  that  the  hind  wing  has  "  a  trans-cellular 
row  of  violet  punctiforra  spots,  which  occur  also  on  the 


188  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

underside."  The  only  Siamese  specimen  I  have  seen  (a 
female  in  Godfrey's  collection)  has  but  one  small  violet 
dot  in  the  apex  of  the  cell  of  the  hind  wing  and  on  the 
underside  only.  A  Singapore  male  is  the  same  in  this 
respect,  while  another  has  this  violet  dot  on  the  upperside 
but  not  on  the  underside.  The  sub-apical  spots  of  the 
fore  wing  are  rather  smaller  in  drucei  than  in  phoebus. 

Subgenus  Salpinx,  Hiibn. 

This  subgenus  is  characterized  by  a  patch  of  light 
androconial  scales  on  the  upperside  of  the  hind  wing  just 
below  the  costa  and  entering  the  cell.  The  different  species 
occurring  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  may  be  distinguished 
thus  : — 

a.    No  white  in  basal  region  of  hind  wing. 
b.    Well-defined  light  blue  spot  below  lirst 
median    nervule    of    fore    wing ;    hind 
wing  without  double  row  of  marginal 
spots  leucogonys. 

b\   No  light  blue  spot,  (or  if  present,  barely 
visible)   below  iirst  median  nervule  of 
fore  wing  ;  hind  wing  with  double  row 
of  whitish  marginal  spots, 
c.     Fore  wing  with  well-deflned  white 

apical  spots  singapura. 

c\    Fore  wing  without  or  with  faint 

white  apical  spots  deieani. 

c*.   Fore  wing  with  well-defined  apical 

spots  and  marginal  spots  at  apex   crassa. 
a\    Basal    region    of  hind   wing   prominently 

white  diocletianus, 

44.     Euploea  leucostictos  Gmel.  leucogonys  Butl. 

Euploea  leucostictos  leucogonys  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  263. 
Euploea  vesligiaia  Distant  1882,  p.  27,  Tab.  Ill,  flgs.  6  &  7. 

Loc.  S.W.  Siam  :  Hat  Sanuk  and  Tasan  ;  Lang- 
kawi  Islands  ;  Kelantan  :  Kuala  Krai ;  Perak  :  Maxwell's 
Hill  ;  Pahang  :  Kuala  Lipis  ;  Selangor  :  Bukit  Kutu  (F.M.S. 
Mus.).  Perak:  Gunong  Kledang,  2,646  ft.;  Selangor- 
Pahang  :  Semangko  Pass,  2,700  ft.  ;  Selangor  :  Hukit  Kutu 
3,457  ft.  ;  Negri  Sembilan  :  Gunong  Angsi,^  2,000-2,700  ft.  ; 
Singapore  (Raffles  Mus.) . 

Distrib.  E.  leucostictos  ranges  from  India  to  For- 
mosa, south  and  east  through  Malaysia  to  the  Mariannes. 
The  subspecies  occurring  in  the  Malaysian  subregion  are  : — 

E.  I.  leucogonys  Butl.  Malay  Peninsula  (Siam  and 

Burma). 

E.  I.  vestigiata  Butl.  Sumatra. 

E.  I.  juno  Stich.  Nias  I. 

E.  I.  phone  Doh.  •  Engano  I.  i   ■ 

E.  l.  marea  Fruhst.  Batu  Is. 

E.  I  leucostictos  Gmel.  Java. 

t.  I.  timaius  Fruhst.  Bawean  I. 

E.  I.  relucida  Fruhst  Bali. 

/:    /.  syra  Fruhst.  Borneo  (and  Palawan). 

As  with  so  many  Danaines,  the  females  appear  to  be 
rare.  In  the  F.M.S.  Museums  series  of  63  only  5  are 
females.     In  the  Raffles  Museum  there  are  31  males  to  7 


1921]  MouLTON  :   Malaysian  Butterflies.  189 

females.  Both -sexes  are  very  variable  both  in  markings 
and  size.  In  the  Raflles  Museum  series  oi  25  males  from 
Bukit  Kutu,  all  taken  in  xVpril  1915,  the  expanse  of  wings 
varies  from  68  to  100  mm. 

45.  Euploea  aegyptus  Butl.  sinqapura  Moore. 

Eiiploea  aegyptus  xtngapura  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  268. 
Eiil)ioea  (leguplns  Distant   1882    p.  22   (foot-note). 

Loc.     Sinjfaporc,  2  5  <J  ,  1  $    (Raffles  Mus.). 

Although  this  species  is  at  once  distinguished  from  the 
next,  midamns,  by  the  presence  .of  apical  v^hite  spots  in  the 
fore  wing,  nevertheless,  as  Fruhstorfer  points  out,  its 
relationship  to  that  species  must  be  very  close. 

Apparently  aegyptiis  represents  a  group  of  island  form§ 
extending  as  far  north  as  Singapore,  but  not  occurring  on 
the  Malay  Peninsula  i)roper,  while  midamiis  is  a  continental 
species,  with  a  geographical  race  known  as  E.  m.  dejeani 
extending  down  the  Malay  Peninsula  as  far  south  as  Negri 
Sembilan,  but  not  so  far  as  Singapore. 

The  Malaysian  subspecies  of  /s.  aegijptns  are  : — 

E.  a.  aegyptus  Butl,  Borneo. 

E.  a.  sihgapiira  Moore  Singapore. 

E.  a.  sophia  Moore  Sumatra. 

E.  a.  limyrns  Fruhst.  Pulau  Tello,  Batu  Is. 

E.  a.  staiidingeri  Kheil  Nias  I. 

E.  a.  sticheli  Hag.  Mentawei  Is. 

E.  a.  rafflesi  Moore  Java. 

E.  a.  tncolora  Fruhst.  Bawean  I. 

E.  a.  iduna  Fruhst.  Kangean  I. 

46.  Euploea  midamus  Linn,  dejeani  Moore. 

Euploea  midamus  dejeani  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.  270. 

Euploea  dejeani  Distant  1882,  p.  29,  Tah.  IV,  flR.  1. 

Euploea  chine  Distant  1882.  p.  ,{(>,  'I'ab.  IV,  flR.  2,  Tab.  H,  flg.  .'>. 

Euploea  margarita  Distant  1882,  p.  31,  Tab.  IV,  fig.  3. 

Loe.  S.W.  Siam  :  Hat  Sanuk  and  Tasan  ;  Kedah  : 
Kedah  Peak  and  (nirun  ;  Selangor  :  Bukit  Kutu  ;  Tioman 
Island ;  Negri  Sembilan  :  Bukit  Tangga  (F.M.S.  Mus.)'. 
Perak  :  Kuala  Lenggong  (F.M.S.  Agric.  Dept.).  Pahang 
(Raflles  Mus.). 

DistriJb.     E.  m.  dejeani  is  the  only  form  occurring  in 

the  Malaysian  siibrogion.  OHior  subspecies  occur  in  Siam, 
Assam,  Nepal  and  South  China. 

The  F.M.S.  Museums  series  of  8  males  and  1  female 
shows  an  interesting  gradation  from  the  Siamese  form  with 
blue  gloss  on  the  fore  wings  and  reduced  white  sub- 
marginal  spots  in  the  hind  wing  to  another  from  Kedah,  still 
with  the  blue  gloss  but  with  larger  white  sub-marginal  spots 
in  the  hind  wing,  merging  finally  into  examples  from  fur- 
ther south  in  which  the  blue  gloss  practically  disappears 
altogether. 

A  male  in  the  Ratllcs  Museum  from  Pahang  goes  one 
step  further  in  showing  distinct  traces  of  wliite  apical  spots 
in  the  fore  wing,  thus  approximating  the  last  form  discussed 


190  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         I  Vol.  X, 

{E.  a.  singapura),  which  appears  to  l)e  confined  to  Singa- 
pore. This  Pahang  male,  however,  and  a  female  bearing 
the  same  localitj'  label  approximate  the  Siamese  form  in 
having  the  hind-marginal  spots  on  the  hind  wing  much 
reduced.  It  is  evidently  a  variable  species  and  it  would 
probably  be  more  correct  to  make  the  aegyptus  group  of 
forms  subspecies  of  midamus.  Distant's  description  and 
figure  of  E.  chloe  from  Province  Wellesley,  Malacca  and 
Singapore,  suggest  connecting  links  between  the  two.  His 
figure  of  margarita  shows  pale  blue  spots  on  fore  wing 
which  I  have  not  seen  in  Malay  Peninsula  examples  of  this 
species. 

47.  Euploea  crassa  Butl,  crassa  Bull. 

Enploea  kliioi  crassa  Fruhslorfer   1910,  p.  271,  flg.   19c. 

Euploea  crassa  Fnihstorfer  1911,  p.  278.  ' 

Enploea  crassa  Distant  1882,  p.  29,  Tab.  V,  flg.  8^ 

Loc.     Kedah  (Distant). 

Distant's  single  specimen  from  Kedah  appears  to  be 
the  only  record  of  the  species  in  the  Malaysian  subregion. 
The  typical  form  occurs  in  Siam  and  Indo-China,  with  sub- 
species in  India  and  Ceylon.  The  elongated  pale  violet 
apical  spots  in  the  fore  wing,  practically  connected  with 
well-defined  whitish  spots  on  the  apical  half  of  the  hind- 
margin,  render  this  species  easy  to  distinguish  from  the 
other  species  of  this  subgenus. 

48.  Euploea  diocletianus  Fab.  diocletiamis  Fab. 

Euploea   diocletianus  diocletianus  Fruhstorfer  1910,  p.   271. 
Euploea  diocletianus  Distant  1882,  p.  28,  Tab.  IV,  flgs.  4  A  5. 

A  common  butterfly  throughout  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

In  a  series  of  78  males  out  of  80  specimens  from  the 
F.M.S.  Museums  the  only  variation  to  be  noticed  is  in  the 
small  white  post-cellular  spot  of  the  fore  wing  upper  side. 
This  varies  in  size  ;  is  absent  altogether  in  one  from  Kelan- 
tan  ;  in  others  it  is  well-formed  and  triangular  in  shape, 
while  in  a  few  there  is  a  second  spot  below  it. 

E.  diocletianus  is  typically  a  Malaysian  butterfly,  with 
the  following  subspecies  recognized  in  our  subregion  : — 

/•r.  d.  diocletianus  Fab.  Malay    Peninsula,    Sumatra 

(and  Siam  to  Burma  and 
Assam). 

E.  d.  lowi  Butl.  Borneo. 

E.  d.  aerithus  Fruhst.  Natuna  Is. 

E.  d.  alcidice  Godt.  Java. 

E.  d.  schreiberi  Butl.  Nias  I. 

E.  d.  schildi  Fruhst.  Batu  Is, 

One  other  subspecies  occurs  in  Northern  India, 

111  addition  to  the  foregoing  species  of  this  subgenus 
occurring  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  the  following  species  are 
recorded  from  the  Malaysian  subregion,  although  not  from 
the  Malay  Peninsula  ; — 


1921]  MouLTON  :  Malaysian  Butterflies.  191 

49.  Euploea  eleusina  Cr.  eleusina  Cr. 

huploca   eleusina  eleusina   Fruhstorfer    1910,   i).   262. 

Distiih.  Java,  Baweaii,  Bali  and  Kangean  Islands,  with 
other  subspecies  outside  Malaysia  from  Sumba  and  Celebes. 

50.  Euploea  gamelia  Hiibn. 

Euploea  gamelia   Fiulistorfer   1910,   p.   208. 

Distrib.     West  and  East  Java. 

Hitherto  only  known  from  the  niounlaiiis  of  West 
Java.  Mr.  Boden  Kloss  sends  me  a  female  from  the  F.M.S. 
Museums  collected  at  Ongop  Ongop,  4,800  ft.,  on  the  east 
side  of  Idjen  massif,  Eastern  Java.  It  does  not  appear  to 
he  separable  from  the  West  .la van  form. 

51.  Euploea  martini  de  Nicev. 

Euploea   marlini   riiilistorior   1910,   p.   208,   fig.* 80c. 

Distrib.     Sumatra. 

52.  Euploea  simillima  Moore  aelia  Fruhst. 

Euploea  simillima  aelia  Frulistorfer  1910,  p.  269. 

Distrib.  North  Borneo,  with  other  subspecies  outside 
Malaysia. 


BinKham,  C.  T. 
lioden  Klos8,  C. 


Hutler,  A.  G. 


Criiger 

de  JNiceville,  L.  & 
Marshall,  G.  F. 

Distant,  W.  L. 

Ooherty,  W. 


ET8118,  W.  H. 
Fruhstorfer,    H. 


LITERATURE  QUOTED. 

1905.  The  Fauna  of  British.  India.  Butter- 
flies.   Vol.  I. 

1918.  '  Notes  on  Malayan  and  other  Mouse- 
Deer."  Journal  of  tlxe  F.M.S. 
Museums.     Vol.    VII. 

1920.  "  On  a  collection  of  Plants  from 
Peninsular  Siani."  Journal  of  ilie 
F.M.S.  Museums.     Vol.  X. 

1879.  "On  the  Butterflies  in  the  collection 
of  the  British  Museum  hitherto  re- 
ferred to  the  Genus  Euploea  of 
Fabricius."  Journal  of  the  Linnean 
Socielu  (.Zoology),  Vol.  XIX,  pp. 
290-303. 

1878.  Verhandl.  d.  ver  f.  naturwissensch. 
Unterh.  z.  Hamb.    Vol.  III. 

,oo«     '^^^  Butterflies  of  India,  Burmah  and 
L.      1882.        Ceylon.    Vol.  I. 

1882-86.   iihopalocera  Malayana. 

1891.  "  A  List  of  the  Butterflies  of  Engano, 
with  some  remarks  on  the 
Danaidae."  Journal  of  the  Asiatic 
Society  of  Bengal.  Vol.  LX,  Part 
11,  pp.  4-32,  pi.  f. 

1912.  'A  List  of  Indian  Butterflies." 
Journal  of  the  Bombay  Natural 
History  Societu.  Vol.  XXI,  No.  2, 
pp.  553-584,  96d-l,008." 
1909-1911.  The  Macrolepidoptera  of  the  World 
by  Dr.  Adalbert  Seitz.  Vol.  IX. 
Hhopalocera  (Indo-Australica) . 


192 


Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums,         [Vol.  X, 


Godfrey,  E.  J. 
Moore,  F. 


Moulton,  J.  C. 


Piopers,  M.  C.  & 
Snellen,  P   C.  T 

Rolhschilo    Lord. 


1916.  "The  Butterflies  oi  Siam."  Journal 
Natural  History  Society  of  Siam. 
Vol.  II. 

1883.  '*  A  monograph  oi  Limnaina  and 
Euploeina,  two  groups  of  Diurnal 
Lepidbptera  belonging  to  the  Sub- 
family Euploeinae,  with  descrip- 
tions of  new  Genera  and  species." 
Proceedings  of  the  Zoological 
Society  of  London,  pp.  201-324,  pi. 
XXIX-XXXI. 

1914.  "Hand-List  of  the  Birds  of  Borneo." 

Journal  Straits  Branch,  Royal 
Asiatic  Society.    No.  67. 

1915.  "  The     Butterflies    of    Borneo,    with 

Notes  on  their  Geographical  Distri- 
bution, and  Keys  for  Identification." 
Sarawak  Museum  Journal.  Vol.  II, 
No.  6,  pp.  197-260. 

1915  («)  "  Some  undescribed  Bornean  Nyni- 
phalidae."  Entomoloqist,  Vol. 
XLVIII,  No.  624,  pp.  97-100. 

The  Rhopalocera  of  Java.    (Danaidae 
1913.       to  Elymniadae). 

1920.  "  Rhopalocera  collected  in  Korinchi, 
West  Sumatra  by  Messrs.  H.  C. 
Robinson  and  C.  Boden  Kloss. 
Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums. 
Vol.  VIll,  Part  iii. 


1921]  193 

VI.     THE  APPLE-SNAILS  OF  THE  MALAY  PENINSULA. 

By  N.  Annandale,  d.sc,  f.a.s.b. 
Director,  Zoological  Siirvcif  of  India. 

Mr.  Bodcn  Kloss  has  been  kind  enough  to  send  me  for 
examination  the  shells  of  Ampullariidae  in  the  collection  of 
the  Federated  Malay  States  Museums  and  has  asked  me  to 
give  him  some  nolcs  upon  them  for  publication.  This 
I  gladly  do,  if  onlv  to  call  attention  to  our  ignorance  of  the 
freshwater  molluscs  of  the  Malay  Peninsula.  De  Morgan^ 
and  Moellendorf-  have  pubhshed  lists  and  descriptions  of 
the  Perak  species,  NevilP  has  described  and  annotated  a 
few  Ampullariidae  and  Viviparidae  from  Penang  and  Perak 
and  I  have  done  so  for  a  few  species  and  races  of  the  former 
family*  from  the  Siamese  Peninsular  Provinces  ;  but  the 
whole  of  malacological  literature  nuist  be  searched  for  a 
few  scattered  references  to  the  species  that  occur  in  the 
southern  parts  of  the  Peninsula. 

The  collection  of  Malayan  Ampullariidae  I  have 
examined  is  not  a  large  one,  but  it  includes  specimens  of 
all  the  species  described  from  the  Peninsula  and  the  Archi- 
pelago. The  type-specimens  of  three  Peninsular  forms  are 
also  in  my  hands,  namely  Pachi/labra  stoliczkana  (Nevill) 
P.  lurbinis  siihampullacra  (Nevill)  and  P.  tnrhinis  laciis- 
tris,  Annandale.  These  specimens  belong  to  the  collection 
of  the  Zoological  Survey  of  India  and  are  preserved  in  the 
Indian  Museinn. 

The  following  forms  are  known  from  the  Siamese 
Peninsular  Provinces,  Penang,  "  Malacca  "  and  the  Feder- 
ated Malay  States  ;  possibly  otliers  may  occur  in  Singapore, 
Johore  and  other  southern  districts,  but  none,  so  far  as  I 
know,  have  been  lecorded.^ 

AMPULLARIIDAE  OF  THE  MALAY  PENINSULA. 

(Malay  1131110  "  Kelembuai.") 
Pachiflabra  stoliczkana  (Nevill)  Penang ;        Larut,        Perak  ; 

Selangor. 
Pachylabra  conica  var.  contractu        Assam  ;        Upper       Burma  ; 

Penang  ;    "  Malacca." 
Pachylabra  gracilis   (Lea)  Continental     Siam  ;     Tenas- 

•   serim  ;  Penang  ;  Perak. 
Pachylabra  perakensis  (de  Morgan)   Renong  ;   Perak  ;   Selangor. 
Pachylabra  U)inkl€yi  (Pilsbry)  Pegu  ;  Singgora  Province  in 

Peninsular   Siam. 
P.  turbinis  snbanipuliacea  (Nevill)       Singgora      l^rovince  ;      Fed- 
derated      Malay      States ; 
Penang. 
P.  turbinis  lacustris  Annandale  TaJe  Sap,  Singgora  Province. 

'Hull.  Soc.  Zool.  France,  X,  pp.  353-428  (1885). 

'Proc.  Zool.  Soc.  London,  1891,  pp.  330-348. 

'Cat.  Moll.  Ind.  Mus.,  fasc.  E.  (1877),  and  Hand  List  Moll.  Ind. 
Mus.,  II  (1884),  pp.  1-8. 

*Journ.  Nat.  Hist.  Soc.  Siam,  IV,  pp.  1-24  &  45,  pis.  I,  II  (1920). 

'Nevill  (Hand  List  Moll.  Ind.  Mus.,  Ii;  1884,  p.  5)  records 
two  examples  under  the  name  of  Ampullai'ia  conica  var.  borneensis 
(=  Pachylabra  borneensis)  from  Singapore.  Traill  (Journ.  Ind. 
Arch.  I,  1847,  p.  240)  mentions  an  example  of  Ampullaria  fi'om 
Siagapore,  G.B.K. 


194  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

Pachylabra  stoliczkana  (Nevill) . 

1877.     AmpiiUaria  stoliczkana,  Nevill,  Cat.  Moll.  Ind.  Mus.,  fasc.  K.  p.   11. 
1881.     Ampullaria  stoliczkana,  id.,  .lourn.  As.  Soc.  Bengal  L  (2),  p.  153,  pi.  vl, 

Jig.    11. 
1885.     Ampullaria  welleslyensis,  de  Morgan,  Bull.  Soc.  Zool.  France,  K,  p.  419, 

pi.  viii,  fig.   ];5. 

1891.     Ampullaria  wellesltjensis,  Moellendorf,   op.   cit.,  p.  340. 

1911.     Pachylabra   lurbinoides,   Kobelt    (in   part),   op.   cit.,  pp.    95     ii)2,   pi.   xl, 

tigs.   6,   7. 
1911.     Pachylabra  welleslyensis,  id.,  op.  cit.,  p.  91,  pi.  xxxix,  tigs.  !>,  6. 

Two  specimens  in  tlie  collection  received  from  the 
Malay  States  agree  closely  with  the  types  of  Stoliczka's 
species,  which  are  in  the  Indian  Museum.  They  also  seem 
to  me  to  agree  sutiiciently  closely  with  de  Morgan's  figures 
of  his  A.  welleslijensis  from  the  same  locality,  allowing  for 
the  fact  that  the  figures  are  based  on  a  specimen  m  which 
the  apical  part  of  the  spire  had  been  completely  destroyed. 
Further  they  have  a  close  resemblance  in  outline  to  two  of 
Kobelt's  figures  of  P.  turbinoides,  namely  those  cited  above, 
one  specimen  resembling  each  figure. 

As  Stoliczka's  original  description  is  difficult  ol  access 
I  quote  it  in  extenso  : — 

"  Though  I  very  much  doubt  if  the  Penang  form  can 
be  really  distinct  from  the  many  described  species,  still  I 
find  it  impossible  to  class  it  even  as  a  variety  of  any  of 
the  species  I  know.  Its  substance,  shape  of  the  whorls, 
etc.,  distinguish  it  at  a  glance  from  all  the  forms  I  have 
grouped  together  as  A.  conica.  It  a  good  deal  resembles 
Reeve's  fig.  37  A.  turbinoides  (Australia)  ;  it  is,  however, 
more  oblong,  ovate  and  contracted  in  shape,  with  sombre- 
brown,  polished  coloration.  In  these  latter  respects  it 
closely  resembles  A.  polita  from  which  its  shape  and 
produced  spire  easily  distinguish  it.  A.  callistomo,  Mori. 
(Ser.  Conch.,  Livr.  IV,  Pt.  13,  fig.  7  ;  Cambodia),  is  still 
closer,  though  indeed  this  seems  to  me  to  be  scarcely  more 
than  a  small  variety  of  A.  polita.  Reeve's  fig.  96  of  his 
A.  javanica  (Java)  may  perhaps  prove  to  belong  to  one 
and  the  same  species  ;  the  typical  figure  is  apparently  taken 
from  an  immature  shell,  and  it  is  therefore  impossible  to 
decide  without  actual  comparison. 

Ovately  oblong,  with  six  regularly  produced  whorls,  the 
last  not  swollen  (or  subangulate)  above  as  in  A.  polita  and 
A.  callistoma  ;  scarcely  imibilicate  ;  aperture  contracted 
and  produced,  marked  interiorly  with  faint  interrupted 
bands,  slightly  effused  at  base  ;  epidermis  polished,  brown. 

Long.  54,  diani  41,  long.  :  apert.  36,  diam.  23.5  mil. 

(7)     Penang  ;  coll.  Stoliczka.     Three  lull-grown  and 
four  young  specimens." 


1921]    Annandale  :  Apple-Snails  of  the  Penin.sitla.        195 

Stoliczka's  type-series  was  from  Penang,  while  de 
Morgan  gives  the  same  island  and  Lariit,  Perak,  as  localities 
for  his  A.  welleslijen.si.s.  The  new  specimens  are  from 
Selangor. 

I  think  that  Nevill  was  right  in  treating  this  form  as 
a  variety  of  P.  conica.  as  some  individuals  might  be 
assigned  either  to  it  or  to  the  forma  tijpica  of  that  species 
with  almost  equal  justice.  Only  tiie  specimens  from  Bhamo 
ill  Nevill's  collection  can,  hoAvevcr,  be  assigned  to  it,  those 
from  Tenasserim  representing  P.  gracilis. 

The  variety  was  described  from  "  Malacca."  According 
to  Kobelt  it  occurs  in  Assam  as  well  as  in  Upper  Burma. 
The  forma  ti/pica  of  P.  conica  is  widely  distributed  in 
Burma  and  has  been  found  in  Northern  Siam. 

Pachylabra  gracilis  (Lea). 

1!I2(I.     Pachylabra  gracilis.  Aiinandalp,  Journ.  Nat.   Hist.   Soc.   Siam,  IV   (1920), 
p    11,  pi.  i,  ng.  4. 

The  differences  between  this  species  and  P. 
conica  noted  in  the  paper  cited  appear  to  be  constant  in 
the  fairly  large  scries  now^  before  me.  The  internal 
colouration  of  tiie  shell  also  is  characteristic  (iig.  cit.). 
The  largest  shell  I  have  seen  is  37  mm.  high  and  31.5  mm. 
in  maximum  diameter..  The  apex  is  eroded  and  the  shell 
has  the  appearance  of  being  adidt. 

There  are  specimens  in  the  F.M.S.  Museums  collection 
from  Penang  and  the  Kinta  district,  Perak.  The 
species  has  hitherto  been  known  only  from  northern  Siam, 
but  the  shells  from  Tenasserim  labelled  A.  conica  var. 
compacla  by  Nevill  certainly  belong  to  it. 

Pachylabra  perakensis  (de  Morgan). 

ISS.').     Anipiillaria  perakensis,  do  Morgan,  op.  cit.,  p.  418,  pi.  viil,  fig.  12. 

The  colouration  of  the  shell  is  evidently  variable.  Dc 
Moi'gan  describes  it  as,  "  Caerulea,  multis  croceis  faciis 
ornata,"  but  in  the  specimens  I  have  examined  it  is  of  a 
bright  yellowish  olivaceous  shade  with  a  few  faint  darker 
spiral  bands.  The  shape,  high  polish  of  the  surface  and 
sculpture  of  very  tine  longitudinal  costae  are,  howevei', 
characteristic. 

De  Morgan  records  the  species  from  the  lower  Kinta 
aii<l  Plus  valleys.  There  are  specimens  in  the  Kuala  Lumpur 
collection  from  Perak  and  Selangor  and  Mr.  Boden  Kloss 
recently-  sent  me  one  from  Benong  on  the  Isthmus  of  Kra 
on  the  Siamese  side  of  the  Pakchan  river. 

Pachylabra  turbinis  subampullacea  (Nevill) . 

I.SH.').      Ainpiilltirid    liirhinis    v;ii-.    snhampullocea.    Nevill,    Hand    ist    Moll.    Ind. 

Mils.    II,    p.    tl. 
1885.     Ampiillaria  smiKilrensis,  de   Morgan   inec  Philippi),  op.  cit  ,  p.  418. 

1!)aO.     PachyUihra  liirbinis  race  siihampnlldctd,  Annandale,  op.  fit  .  p.  48,  pi.  i, 
fig.   7,   pi.   ii,   (ij{.    1. 


196  •     Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

This  form,  which  I  have  discussed  at  length  in  the 
paper  cited,  is  evidently  Ihe  common  large  Pachylabra  of 
Ihe  Malay  States  as  well  as  of  the  Siamese  Peninsular 
province  of  Singgora.  De  Morgan  records  it  from  Penang 
and  Rhaman  as  well  as  from  both  the  upper  and  the  lower 
Kinta  and  Plus  valleys  in  Perak.  It  is  not  known  to  range 
north  of  the  Tale  Sap  or  Inland  ?>ea  of  Singgora.  Several 
authors  have  confused  it  wdth  P.  ampiillacea  (Linn.) 
[Ampullaria  sumatreims,  Philippij,  but  Nevill  pointed 
out  the  differences  quite  clearly  in  his  "  Hand  List." 


1921]  107 

VII.     TWO  NEW  BATRACHIANS  AND  A  NEW  SNAKE 

FROM  BORNEO  AND  THE  MALAY  PENINSULA. 

By  Malcolm  A.  Smith,  F.Z.S. 

(Plate  n.) 

I  am  indebted  to  the  Director  of  the  Federated  Malay 
States  Museums,  for  the  opportunity  of  examining  two 
separate  collections  of  reptiles  and  hatrachians.  One  of 
them  was  made  by  the  native  Museum  collectors  in  1919, 
upon  Mt.  Dulil,  Sarawak,  Borneo  ;  the  other,  also  in  the 
same  year,  during  the  expedition  of  Messrs.  Robinson  and 
Kloss  to  Peninsular  Siam.  Amongst  a  large  amount 
of  interesting  material  tlie  following  species  appear  to  be 
new  : — 

Rana  pullus,  sp.  nov.  (pi.  11,  fig.  1). 

Vomerine  teeth  in  two  very  oblique  series,  commencing 
between  the  choanae  and  extending  well  behind,  the  distance 
between  them  less  than  their  distance  from  the  choanae  ; 
tongue  without  median  papilla  ;  head  as  long  as  broad, 
snout  rounded  or  obtusely  pointed,  feebly  projecting  beyond 
the  mouth,  a  little  longer  than  the  eye  ;  canthus  rostralis 
(jbtuse,  loreal  region  obli(|ue,  concave  ;  nostril  nearer  the 
tip  of  the  snout  than  the  e>e  ;  distance  between  the  nostrils 
e((ual  to  or  greater  than  thai  of  the  upper  eyelid  ;  tympanum 
very  distinct,  1/2  to  W/Tt  the  diameter  of  the  eye. 

Fingers  moderately  long,  first  slightly  shorter  than 
second  ;  tips  with  moderately  large  discs,  which  are  a  little 
broader  than  long,  and  with  a  groove  in  front  separating 
the  upper  from  the  lower  surface  ;  subarticular  tubercles 
large  and  prominent  ;  discs  of  the  toes  like  those  of  the 
fingers  ;  toes  half  webbed,  the  web  reaching  the  disc  of  the 
fifth  toe  and  penetrating  to  a  ([uarter  between  the  outer 
metatarsals  ;  subarticular  tubercles  moderately  prominent  ; 
a  tarsal  fold  ;  inner  metatarsal  tubercle  feebly  prominent, 
'^/A  to  4/5  the  length  of  (he  inner  toe  ;  no  outer  tubercle  ; 
tibia  2  to  2V4  times  in  (hslance  from  snout  to  vent,  as  long 
as  or  a  little  longer  than  Ihe  fool  ;  the  heels  meet  when  the 
limbs  are  folded  at  right  angles  to  the  body  ;  the  tibiotarsal 
articulation  reaches  the  snout  or  not  quite  so  far. 

Skin  witli  a  glandular  network  of  fine  folds,  the  reticu- 
lations largest  and  best  marked  al)ove.*  A  strong  glandular 
fold  irom  the  eye  to  the  shoulder. 

Dark  grey  or  blackish  above,  whitish  below,  thickly 
speckled,  except  on  the  belly,  with,  dark  grey.  Some  of  the 
young  have  light  and  dark  bars  on  tlie  hind  limbs. 

*  The  skin  of  tliis  frog  is  unusually  tender.  There  is  not  a 
single  example  in  the  serius  in  which  the  skin  is  not  torn  or 
damaged  in  some  part  of  Ihe  hody.  The  glandular  reticulations 
leferred  to  are  possibly  not  so  prominent  in  life  as  in  spirit 
specimens. 


198 


Journal  of  the  F.M.S    Museums        [Vol.  X, 


This  frog  does  not  appear  to  have  any  very  clbse  ally. 
Mr.  Boulenger,  who  kindly  examined  the  series  with  me, 
placed  it  near  to  Rana  heddomii  (ninther,  from  Southern 
India. 

Males  smaller  than  females,  without  vocal  sacs,  and 
with  an  enlarged  (pale)  pad  on  the  first  finger. 

Eggs  large  and  few,  unpigmented,  the  vitelline  sphere 
measuring  2  mm.  in  diameter. 

Nasals  largely  in  contact  with  each  other  ;  terminal 
l)lialanges  Y-shaped. 

Type  series  in  the  British  Museum.  Type  locality, 
Tasan,  25  miles  S.W.  of  Chumporn,  Peninsular  Siam. 

46  specimens  examined,  all  from  the  type  loca)ity,  with 
one  exception  from  Mamoh,  in  Renong  (No.  4501 ) . 


Measurements  of  Type 

Series  in  Millimetres 

Anthor's    Number 

N 
«1 

00 

oc 

•4- 

0 

M 

N 

in 

00 

N 

oc 

1 

0 

Snout  to  Vent. 

31 

31 

33 

32 

31 

37 

38 

38 

40 

38 

31 

Head:  — 

Length 

12 

12 

13 

13 

12.5 

M 

145 

M-5 

^5 

J5 

14-5 

Width 

12 

12 

13 

14 

13 

16 

17 

16 

17 

16 

16 

Snout 

6 

6 

6 

6 

6 

7 

7 

7 

7 

7 

7 

Eye 

4.5l   4-5     5 

6 

5-5 

6 

6 

6 

6 

6      5-5 

Interorbital  Width 

3 

3       3 

3 

3 

4 

4 

4 

4'5 

4 

4 

Tympanum 

3 

3        3 

3 

3 

2.5 

3 

25 

3 

25 

2-5 

Arm 

i8 

18      20 

20 

20 

24 

25 

24 

26 

24      24 

Leg 

50 

50      50 

53 

51 

59 

59 

59 

60 

62 

5<^ 

Tibia 

16 

16      17 

17 

16 

18 

18 

18 

19 

19 

19 

Foot 

16 

i6  '   16 

16.5 

16 

t8 

t8 

r8.5 

19 

19 

10 

<? 

i  \  i 

i 

<? 

? 

? 

? 

? 

9 

? 

Nectophryne  picturata,  .sp.  nov.  (pi.  II,  fig.  2) , 

Habit  slender  ;  head  as  long  as  broad  ;  snout  loundcd. 
projecting  beyond  the  lower  jaw,  as  long  as  the  orbit ;  no 
canthus  rostralis  ;  loreal  region  oblique  ;  interorbital  region 
fwice  as  broad  as  the  upper  eyelid  ;  tympanum  absent. 

Fingers  with  well  developea  truncated  discs,  webl)ed 
al  the  base,  first  much  shorter  than  second  ;  subarticulav 
tubercles  well  developed';  toes  webbed  at  the  base,  the 
discs  a  little  larger  than  those  of  the  fingers  ;  two  flat 
metatarsal  tubercles  ;  no  tarsal  fold  ;  the  tibiotarsal  articu- 
lation reaches  the  tip  of  the  snout, 


1921]  Smith  :  New  Batrachians  and  Snake,  199 

Skin  smooth,  no  parotid  glaiid. 

Blackish  brown  above  on  the  head  and  body,  limbs 
l)aler  with  dark  cross  bars.  Below  with  large  round  spots 
of  pale  yellow. 

A  single  female  specimen  from  Mount  Dulit,  Sarawak, 
N.  Borneo,  collected  at  1,000  metres  in  Augi\st,  1919. 
Type  in  the  British  Museum,  author's  number,  4,559. 

Eggs  large  and  pigmented,  the  vitelline  sphere  having 
diameter  of  2  mm. 

Allied  to  N.  maculaia  Mocquard. 

Measurements  in  Mihimetres. 

Snoul  to  vent  .  .  . .         22. 

Length  of  head  . .  . .         7.5. 

Snout  ..  ..3. 

Arm  . .  . .         14. 

Leg  . .  . .  . .         35. 

Tropidonotus  baramensis,  sp.  nov. 

Maxillary  teeth  21,  the  last  two  abruptly  enlarged. 
Head  short,  not  very  distinct  from  neck  ;  eye  moderate. 
Rostral  twice  as  broad  as  high  ;  nostril  large,  between  two 
nasals  ;  internasals  broader  than  long,  not  half  as  large  as 
the  praefrontals  ;  frontal  scarcely  longer  than  broad,  as 
long  as  its  distance  from  the  end  of  the  snout ;  loreal  slightly 
deeper  than  long  ;  one  prae  and  tiu'ee  postoculars  ;  two  large 
superposed  anterior  temporals  followed  by  ordinary  scales  ; 
8  supra-labials,  4th  and  5th  touching  the  eye  ;  6  infralabials 
in  contact  with  the  anterior  chin-shields,  which  are  very 
broad  and  shorter  than  the  posterior. 

Scales  in  19  rows,  reducing  to  15  before  the  vent,  feebly 
keeled,  those  of  the  outer  row  smooth  ;  ventrals  134,  anal 
divided,  subcaudals  47  pairs. 

Greyish  olive  above  with  an  indistinct  black  isk  net- 
work ;  yellowish  below,  the  fore-part  sparingly,  the  hinder 
very  thickly,  powdered  with  grey  ;  tail  with  a  white  Hne 
along  the  outer  margin  of  the  subcaudals. 

Total  length  700  mm.,  tail,  125. 

A  single  male  specimen  from  Mount  Dulit,  Sarawak, 
North  Borneo,  at  1,000  metres.  Type  m  tht  British 
Museum,  authors  number,  4,579. 

Allied  to  T.  subminiatus  Schiegel,  and  2'.  nigiocinctus 
Bivth. 


Journ.   F.M.S.   Mus.— Vol     X. 


PI.   II. 


■^^ 


1.    RANA    PULLUS.  2.    NECTOPHRYNE    PICTURATA,    X2. 


1921] 


201 


VIII.     SOME  WATER-SNAKES  NEW  TO,  OR  RARE 
IN,  THE  MALAY  PENINSULA. 

By  C.  Boden  Kloss,  i  .z.s. 

The  following  rare  water-snake  of  the  sub-family 
Homalopsinae  is  new  to  the  fauna  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  : 
it  was  obtained  by  a  native  collector  at  the  mouth  of  the 
Kurau  River  at  the  northern  extremity  of  the  coast  of  Perak 
in  January  1917. 

1.  Gerardia  prevostiana. 

Coluber  {Homalopsis)  prevostiimiis  Eyd.  &  Gerv.  in 
Guer.  Mag.  Zool.  cl.  Ill,  1837,  p.  5,  pi.  XV. 

Gerardia  prevostiana  Boulcnger,  Fauna  Brit.  India, 
Rept.  p.  379  (1890),  id..  Cat.  Snakes  Brit.  Mus.  Ill,  p.  20 
(1896). 

The  single  specimen  obtained  agrees  with  Boulenger's 
descriptions  {l.c.s.)  except  that  the  temporals  are  2  -f  2 
and  there  ai'e  three  i)raetrontals,  the  median  one  being 
smaller  than  the  others  and  broadest  in  front. 

Snout  to  vent  305  mm.,  tail  45  mm. 

Hitherto  apparantly  only  known  from  Burma,  India 
and  Ceylon. 

2.  Fordonia  leucobalia. 

Homalopsia  leucobalia  Schleg.  Phys.  Serp.  II,  1837, 
p.  345,  pi.  XIII,  figs.  8,  9. 

Fordonia  leucobalia  Boulenger,  Vert.  Fauna  Malay 
Pen.,  Rept.  &  Batr.  1912,  p.  164. 

The  collector  secured  on  the  same  occasion  one  example 
of  the  variety  named  F.  unicoloi  by  Gray.  Snout  to  vent 
350  mm.  ;  tail  50  mm. 

This  species  ranges  from  Bengal  to  Cochin-China  and 
North  Australia.  It  has  been  taken  at  Singapore  and  at 
Penang,  where  Cantor  says  it  is  common,  but  the  present 
specimen  is  the  first  we  have  met  with. 

3.  Herpeton  tentaculatum. 

Erpeton  tentaculalus  Lacep.,  Bull.  Sci.  Soc.  Philom. 
II,  1800,  p.  169  ;  id.,  Ann.  Mus.  II,  1803,  p.  280,  pi   1 

Herpeton  tentaculatum  Boulenger,  Cat.  Snakes  Brit. 
Mus.  Ill,  1896,  p.  25  ;  Annandale.  Journ.  Nat.  Hist.  Soc. 
Siam  II,  1916,  p.  91. 

First  recorded  from  the  Malay  Peninsula  by  Dr. 
N.  Annandale  (l.c.s.)  who  obtained  it  in  the  Tale  Sap  or 
Inland  Sea,  Singgora. 


202  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Mii.seiims.       [Vol.  ,X, 

This  curious  snake  is  easily  identified  by  means  of  the 
rostral  appendages  which  occur  on  either  side  of  the  snout  : 
for  an  account  of  these  see  Smilli.  Journ.  Nat.  Hist.  Soc. 
Siam,  I,  1914,  p.  109  and  plate. 

To  include  these  the  "  Synopsis  of  the  Genera "  in 
Mr.  Bouleni^er's  volume  of  Reptilia  and  Batraclia  of  the 
Vertebrate  Fauna  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  (p.  158)  may  be 
altered  as  follows  : — 

No  tentacles  on  the  upper  lip 

II.     Loreal  present  ;  parietals  well  developed  ; 
ventrals  large,  not  keeled 

Scales  in  19  rows,  nasals  scmidivided     ..  Cantoria 
Scales  in  17  rows,  navals  undivided     ...  Gerardiu 

With  tentacles  on  the  upper  lip 

(a  single  species  only)  Herpeton 


10'21]  •  203 

fX.     NINE   NEW   ORIENTAL   BIRDS. 

By  H.  C.  Hoijinson  and  C.  Bodkn  Kloss. 

1.  Treron  bisincta  praetermissa  subsp.  nov. 

Larger  than  T.  h.  bisincta  (Jerdon)  from  Madras 
(wing  144)  :  ditlers  from  T.  h.  donwilii  (Swinh.)  from 
Hainan  in  having  the  grey  nuchal  patch  in  the  female  clear 
and  more  extensive  whereas,  fide  Hartert,  it  is  indistinct  and 
small  in  the  island  bird  (Nov.  Zool.  XVII,  1910,  p.  193). 

Hartert  has  inadvertently  described  the  Ceylon  birds 
as  being  smaller  than  Madras  individuals  (l.c.s.)  though 
his  specimens  are  exactly  the  vsame  size  as  typical  birds, 
and  leygei  is  therefore  synonomous  with  h.  bisincta. 
Svvinhoe  states  that  domvitii  is  smaller  than  the  typical 
form  (presumably  the  bird  now  descrilx^d),  but  this  is 
denied  by  Hartert. 

The  range  of  this  race  is  probably  from  Bengal  and 
Assam  southward  to  the  Malay  States,  and  in  the  north, 
eastwards  to  China  where  the  wing  averages  156  mm. 
(fide  Baker,  India  Pigeons  and  Doves  (1913)  p.  51). 

Tiipes.  Adult  male  and  female  from  Koh  Lak,  South- 
West  Siam.  Collected  bv  H.  C.  Robinson  and  C,  Boden 
Kloss  on  5th  April,  1919.  *  Collector's  Nos.  5075,  5074. 

Wings  162,  161  mm. 

Specimens  examined.  Thirteen  from  the  Malay 
Peninsula.     Wings  157-163  mm. 

Birds  from  East  and  South-Kast  Siam  and  Java 
(apparently  first  met  with  in  the  island  by  Ivloss  early  in 
1920)  are  smaller,  the  wing  being  always  under  150  mm. 
and  these  may  represent  another  race.  We  expect  to  settle 
I  he  point  shortly. 

2.  Macropygia  emiliana  borneensis,  subsp.  nov. 

Differs  from  the  typical  race  from  Java  (typical  locality 
here  specified  as  the  plains  of  Central  Java)  in  having  the 
head  and  nape  distinctly  darker,  the  breast  more  amythsline, 
the  centre  of  the  abdomen  paler,  tending  towards  buff. 
Wing  of  type,  163  mm. 

Type.  Adult  nuile  collected  at  Lingit,  Saribas, 
Sarawak,  Western  Borneo,  bv  Native  Collector  in  March, 
1917. 

Scries  examined.  Five  adult  males  and  two  females, 
ail  from  Sarawak,  compared  with  a  large  series  of  Javan 
birds  liom  all  parts  of  the  island.  Si)eciniens  from  Java, 
attain  a  greater  length  of  wing  than  any  of  our  Bornean 
birds  (one  male,  1(S0  mm.). 

.'{.     Zanclostomus  javanicus  pallidus  subsp.  nov. 

Differs  from  Z.  j.  javanicus  (Horsf.)  of  Java  as  being 
paler  below  :  the  rufous  area  less  iulense  and  (he  p,vo\  \yA\ov 
and  more  washed  with  but!', 


204  Journal  of  the  F.M.S    Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

Type.  Adult  male  from  Kedali  Peak,  Malay  Peninsula, 
2,500-3,500  ft.  Collected  by  H.  C.  Robinson  and  C.  Boden 
Kloss,  4th  December,  1915. 

Twelve  specimens  from  Bandon  to  Negri  Sembilan 
compared  with  fourteen  from  various  parts  of  Java.  A 
Sumatran  and  a  Bornean  example  do  not  apj)ear  to  difi'ei- 
irom  Malayan  birds. 

We  believe  that  all  the  names  which  have  been  referred 
to  tliis  species  api)ly  to  the  Javanese  form  :  javanicus,  of 
course  ;  but  also  Coccyzus  rnhiirostris  Drap.,  Piaya 
evylhrorbyncha  Less,  and  P.  chrysogaster  Less.  P. 
crythioi'hyncha  was  stated  to  come  from  Java  and,  if  so, 
the  description  will  only  tit  this  bird  :  P.  chrysogaster 
seems  to  be  the  same  thing  though  recorded  as  from  Guiana 
and  we  attach  the  name  to  tiie  Javan  form  rather  than 
to  the  other  as  the  forehead  is  stated  to  be  rustv  yellow, 
the  breast  slate  coloured  and  the  abdominal  region,  etc., 
chocolate  red.  As  a  matter  of  fact  the  forehead  of  puHinicus 
is  not  red  ;  but  that  colour  extends  upwards  in  front  of  the 
eyes  to  a  much  greater  extent  than  in  the  race  now  described. 

4.  Brachylophus  puniceus  continentis  subsp.  nov 

The  typical  race  of  this  woodpecker  from  Java  B.  p. 
punier  as  (Hoisf.)  is  very  distinct,  the  earco  verts  being 
darker  green  and  the  back  and  rump  entirely  lacking  any 
tinge  or  tleckings  of  golden  yellow. 

Hartert  (Nov.  Zool.  Ill,  1896,  p.  542)  separated  the 
birds  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Borneo  and  Sumatra  (type- 
locality)  on  these  grounds  and  named  them  Gecinus 
puniceus  ohservandus. 

Seven  Sumatran  birds  befoi-e  ms  (wing  115  123)  are 
distinctly  smaller  than  our  series  fro)>i  the  Peninsula.  For 
the  present  we  content  ourselves  with  naming  the  Malayan 
I'ace  as  above. 

Larger  than  B.  p.  oJjservandus  from  Sumatra.  Wing 
of  t^pc  132  mm. 

Type.  Adult  male  collected  at  Tapli,  Pakchan  Estuary, 
Renong,  North  Malay  Peninsula  by  H.  C.  Robinson  and 
C.  Boden  Kloss  on  3rd  March  1919.     Collector's  No.  4382. 

Specimens  examined.  Seventeen  from  Chumporn  to 
Negri  Sembilan.     Wings  123-136  mm. 

Six  Bornean  birds  have  the  wings  118-126  mm.  and 
seem  to  average  about  the  same  size  as  the  Sumatran  form 
with  which  we  leave  them. 

5.  Eupetes  macrocerus  borneensis  subsp.  nov. 

Like  E.  m.  macrocerus  Temm.  of  Padang,  Sumatra, 
and  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  (E.  m.  griseiventris  Baker) 
but  rather  more  deeply  and  richly  coloured. 

Compared  with  a  topotype  from  West  Sumatra  and 
six  adults  from  the  Malay  Peninsula, 


1921]  RoinxsoN   &   Ki.oss  :   New  Birds.  205 

Type.  Adult  male  from  Samarahan,  South  Sarawak, 
obtained  on  25th.  November  1910  by  F.M.S.  Museums' 
Collector. 

Specimens  examined.  The  type,  five  from  the  Baram 
district  and  one  from  Penrisen,  Sarawak,  Borneo. 

Measurements  of  the  type  :  length,  270  ;  wing  93  ;  tail 
122  ;  tarsus  41  ;  bill  from  gai)e  33  mm. 

6.  Drymocataphus  tickelli  australis,  subsp.  nov. 

Southern  birds  from  Bandon  to  the  southern  limit  of 
the  species  in  Selangor,  where  it  is  strictly  a  montane  bird, 
are  decidedly  richer  coloured  both  above  and  below  than 
typical  ones. 

Types.  Adult  male  and  female  from  Ginting  Bidei, 
Selangor  2,300  ft..  5th  and  16th  April,  1917,  collected  by 
C  Boden  KIoss. 

"  Iris  crimson,  maxilla  brown,  mandible  yellowish 
lleshy,  feet  fleshy." 

Wing   5   66  :   $  64  mm. 

Specimens  examined.  Twenty-seven  from  Bandon, 
Trang,  Perak  and  Seiangor. 

7.  Malacocincla  sepiaria  barussana,  subsp.  nov. 

Type.  Adult  female,  Siolak  Dras,  Korinchi,  West 
Sumatra,  3,000  ft.,  collected  on  18th  March,  1914,  by  H.  C 
Robinson  and  C  Bo<len  Kloss. 

Ditlcrs  from  the  .lavan  forms  of  M.  sepiaria  in  darker 
coloLuation  ;  l)ack  reddish  iiisset,  tail  more  rufous  chestimt, 
foreneck  greyer,  breast  and  al)domen  darker  sutt'used  with 
russet  :  white  centre  to  the  abdomen  reduced.  Crown  dark 
as  in  M.  s.  minor  (Meyer)  of  E.  Java. 

From  the  Malayan  form  M.  o.  tardinata,  Hartert,  it 
diflers  in  having  a  distinctly  dark  cap  and  deeper  colour 
throughout. 

Specimens  cvamined.  Fourteen  from  various  locali- 
ties in  West  Sumatra,  coiupared  with  seven  from  East  and 
Mid-Java  and  thirteen  from  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

8.  Horizillas  rufifrons  indochinensis,  subsj).  nov. 

Selnrin   nillfrons   Hobinson,   Ibis  1915,  p.   748    (S.E.   Siani). 

SeUiria    li-indoceplxila    Kloss,   Ibis    1918,   p.   20;{    (K.   &   S.E.    Slam)   ;   i<J., 

.lourii.  Nat.   Hist.   Soc.   Sljim.  Hi,   1919,  p.  450,   ](ol)iiisoii  :iii<l    Kloss. 

Ibis    19J9,    p.    582    (Cocblii    China). 

Differs  from  H.  rufifrons  inhabiting  Java  in  having 
the  feathers  of  the  forehead  and  crown  more  strongly  black- 
tipped  and  the  nape  darker  ;  paler  above  ;  tail  browner, 
rather  less  brightly  rufous,  the  lowest  upper  tailcoverts 
distinctly  less  so.  Size  ap[)arently  rather  smaller  (15 
Javanese  birds,  wings  ()9  81  :  2(1  Indochinese,  67-75  mm.). 

Types.  Adult  male  and  female  from  Trangbom, 
Cochin  China,  collected  on  Jth  June  and  31st  May  by  C, 
Boden  Kloss. 


206  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

T.  L.  152,  160  ;  Tail,  67,  71  ;  Wing,  71,  76  ;  Tarsus  ; 
19.5,  21  ;  B.i'.g.  17.5,  19  mm. 

Setaria  rufifrons  was  described  by  Cabanis  as  from 
Sumatra  or  Java.  Biittlkofer  has  deliberately  attached 
lepidocephala.  Gray,  to  Javanese  birds  and  they  will  have 
to  bear  that  name  if  different  from  Sumatran  examples  : 
but  Sharpe,  after  inspecting  specimens  in  Lej'den  stated 
that  the  differences  lie  noted  in  the  "  Catalogue  "  did  not 
exist. 

As  several  Javanese  birds  have  wings  of  79  to  81  mm. 
Finsch's  statement  that  the  wing  of  the  type  of  rufifrons 
measures  80  mm.  (3  inches  of  Cabanis)  is  confirmed. 

This  is  one  of  the  species  which,  though  occurring  in 
Indo-China  and  the  Sunda  Islands,  is  not  found  in  the 
Malay  Peninsula. 

{Horizillas  Oberholser,  replaces  Malacopteron  Eyto;i 
and  Setaria  Blyth  :  vide,  Smithsonian  Miscellaneous 
Collections,  48,  1905,  p.  64). 

9.     Prionochilus  maculatus  septentrionalis  subsp.  nov. 

Male.  Differs  from  the  form  inhabiting  the  southern 
part  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  (20  specimens  from  the  Malay 
States  compared)  in  having  the  ear-coverts  much  greyer, 
hardly  if  at  all  waslied  with  green  ;  the  white  throat  stripe 
narrower  and  the  yello\N  of  the  underparts  considerably 
brighter,  becoming  almost  orange  chrome  on  the  middlit' 
of  the  breast. 

Female.  Differs  in  a  similar  manner  from  the  female 
of  the  southern  race. 

Iris  red  or  reddish  ;  maxilla  black,  mandible  slate,  the 
tip  sometimes  black  ;  feet  dark  slate  or  slaty  black. 

Ten  specimens  examined  from  the  Northern  Malav 
Peninsula  (Lat.  10°   11°  N.) . 

Types.  $  ad.  Tasan,  Clmmporn,  13th  March,  1919. 
H.  C.  Robinson  and  C.  Boden  Kloss,  No.  4548,  $  ad.  Tapli, 
Pakchan  Estuary,  Renong,  3rd  March,  1919.  H.  C.  Robinson 
and  C.  Boden  Kloss,  No.  ^4393. 


1921]  207 

X.     NEW  AND  KNOWN  ORIENTAL  BIRDS. 

By  C.  Boden  Kloss,  m.b.o.u.,  c.f.a.o.u. 

ON  THE  PROPER  NAME  OF  THE  BLACK  DRONGO  WITH 
DESCRIPTIONS  OF  TWO  NEW  SUBSPECIES. 

The  name  by  which  the  Black  Drongo  has  hitherto  been 
lviio\vii  specifically,  Dicriirus  atra  (Miiscicapa  atra 
Hermann,  Obs.  Zool.  1804,  p.  208  :  Tranquebaria,  S.  India) 
is  preoccupied  by  Muscicapa  atra  GmeUn  (Syst.  Nat.  ed.  13, 
1,  1788,  p.  946)  and  Dicrurus  macrocerciis  Vieillot,  must 
replace  it. 

All  the  following  are  based  on  "  Le  Droiigolon  "  of 
Levaillant  (Ois.  d'Afr.,  iii,  1802,  pi.  174)  so  all  belong  to 
the  same  bird  :  but  macrocerciis  has  priority  :  — 

Dicrurus  macrocercus  Vieillot,  1817 

Muscicapa  biloba  Lichtenstein,  1823  "  Ind.   Orient  " 

Dicrurus  indiciis  Stephens,  1826  "  India  " 

Dicrurus  longus  Bonaparte,  1852  "  Java  " 

Levaillant,  however,  recorded  no  locality  for  "  Le 
Drongolon,"  nor  did  Vieillot  for  macrocercus  ;  and  we  have, 
therefore,  to  look  for  a  "  terra  lypica  "  among  the  others. 

The  "  Ind.  Orient "  of  Lichtenstein  is  too  vague  to 
supply  the  need  as  it  merely  means  the  East  Indies  of  Asia 
as  distinguished  from  the  West  Indies  of  America  and  there 
are  several  races  of  Black  Drongo. 

But  Stephens'  Dicrurus  indicus,  "  India "  is  quite 
definite  and  must  therefore  be  accepted  as  the  typical 
locality  for  "  Le  Drongolon  '  and,  therefore,  for  the  first 
Linncan  name,  macrocercus,  applied  to  it  which,  by  the 
subsequent  description  of  the  northern  Indian  form  as 
albirictus  by  Hodgson  in  18»<7,  becomes  by  elimination  the 
name  of  the  Peninsular  Indian  subspecies. 

Bonaparte's  citation  of  Bengal  for  macrocercus 
(Consp.  Av,  I,  1850,  p.  351)  confirms  this  selection  and  his 
attribution  of  Java  to  longus  (t.c.p.  352)  and  Walden's  of 
the  same  place  to  macrocercus  (Journ.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal, 
1875,  pt.  2,  Extra  No.,  p.  129),  though  he  says  quite  rightly 
that  both  these  are  the  same  bird,  come  too  late  ;  while 
the  reference  of  biloba  to  Java  by  Gabanis  (Mus.  Hein  I, 
1850-1,  p.  Ill)  cannot  be  accepted. 

Thus  ai'e  ruled  out  for  further  use  all  names  based  on 
"  Le  Drongolon." 

The  races  of  the  Black  Drongo,  Dicrurus  macrocercus, 
therefore  are  :— 

1.  Dicrurus  macrocercus  macrocercus  Vieill.  (syn.  biloba,  iiulicii.'  ami  longus^, 

Nouv.  Diet.  IX,   1817,  p.  588  :   Peninsular  India.  0<i*iSL  .    /^/^ 

2.  Dicrurus  m.  albirictus   (Hodgs.),  Ind.  Rev.  1837,  p.  320  :  Nepal 

.'5.     Dicrurus  m.  minor  Blyth,   Layard.   Ann.   &  Mag.  Nat.   Hist.    (2),   XIII,    1851, 
p.   129  :   Ceylon. 

4.  Dicrurus  m.  calhoecus  Swinh.    (syn.  siamcnsis  Kloss),   P.Z..S.   1871,  p.  377  : 

Southeast  China. 

5.  Dicrurus  m.  harlerti  Baker,  Nov.  Z(  ol.  XXV,  1918,  p.  299  :  Formosa. 
(').     Dicrurus  m.  thai  Kloss  :   Siam   (postea). 

7.     Dicrurus  m.  javanus  Kloss  :  Java   (postea). 


208  Journal  of  the  FJ/.S.  Museums.       jVoL.  X, 

Dicrurus  macroccrcus  thai  siibsp.  nov. 

Like  1).  in.  nuicrocercns  of  Peninsular  India  but  with 
Ihe  wing  shorter  and  the  wliite  rictal  spot  rarely  present 
instead  of  rarely  absent  (present  onee  in  ten  only  :  whereas 
in  D.  in.  macrocerciis  it  is  al^sent  once  in  ten  according  to 
Baker  in  Nov.  Zool.  XXV  ;  1918,  p.  277). 

Ditters  from  D.  m.  ciithoeca  in  having  a  shorter  bill 
and  wing  while  the  median  feathers  of  the  tail  are  always 
shorter  but  the  outermost  genendly  longer. 

Specimens  examined.  Twenty  from  S.  Tenasserim, 
S.W.  and  Central  Siam  and  South  Annam.  Wing  123  140  : 
Tail,  outermost  feathers,  150  178,  median  feathers,  100  108; 
bill  from  gape  23-25. 

Type.  Adult  male.  No.  4975.  Collected  at  Koh  Lak, 
S.W.  Siam,  3rd  April  1919,  by  H.  C.  Robinson  and  C.  Boden 
Kloss. 

"  Iris  dark  brownish  red,  bill  and  feet  black." 

Total  length  296  ;  wing  135  ;  tail  177-105  ;  bill  from 
gape  25  mm. 

Dicrurus  macrocercus  javanus  subsp.  nov. 

Like  D.  m.  thai  but  with  a  larger  bill  (practic^dly  equal 
in  size  to  that  of  D.  in.  cathoeca). 

Specimens  examined.  Twelve  from  East  .lava  and 
Mid-Java.  Wing  129  139  ;  tail,  outermost  feathers, 
147-166,  median  feathers,  101    114  ;  bill  from  gape,  24-27. 

Type.  Adult  male  No.  5953.  Collected  at  liadjoelmati, 
Besoeki,  E.  Java,  3rd  Eebruary  1920,  by  C.  Bodcn  Kloss. 

"  Iris  dark,  bill  and  feet  black." 

Total  length  296  ;  wing  139  ;  tail  157  ;  bill  from  gape 
26  mm. 

ON   THE   RUBY-CHEEK    WITH    DESCRIPTIONS    OF 
THREE  NEW  SUBSPECIES. 

Having  assembled  a  large  series  of  Chalcoparia 
singalensis  from  Indo-China  and  Malaysia  I  take  the  oppor- 
tunity to  review  the  races  occurring  on  the  mainland  and 
the  large  islands. 

Beginning  with  the  northern  specimens  of  the  series 
1  recognise  the  following  forms  : — 

1.     Chalcoparia  singalensis  koratensis  Kloss. 

Kloss,  Ibis  1918,  p.  218  (Korat,  E.  Siam). 

Males  with  the  rufous  of  the  foreneck  not  extending  so 
far  downwards  as  in  other  races  and  terminating  abruptly 
on  the  upper  breast.  Remaining  lower  parts  a  markedly 
brighter,  less  greenish  yellow. 

Females  with  lower  parts  brighter  than  in  the  typical 
race  (^.  s.  singalensis. 


1921]       BoDEN  K1.0SS  :  New  and  Known  Birds.  209 

Specimens  examined  from  North  Siam,  East  Siani 
(topotypes),  South-East  Siam,  South  Annam  (14  ^  ,  9  9  ). 

2.  Chalcoparia  singalensis  interposita  Robinson  and  Kloss, 

subsp,  nov. 

Males  with  rufous  of  foroneck  extending  over  the  upper 
breast  and  ending  gradually.  Remaining  lower  parts  not 
so  brightly  yellow  as  in  C.  s.  koratensi.s  but  less  greenish 
than  in  C.  s.  singcdensis. 

Females  like  T.  .s.  koratensis. 

Specimens  examined  from  Bangkok,  Siam,  south 
through  the  North  Malav  Peninsula  to  lat.  6°  30'  N.  (11  3  , 

Types.  Adult  male  from  Takuapa,  West  Coast  Penin- 
sular Siam.  Collected  by  H.  C.  Robinson  and  C.  Boden 
Kloss  on  18th  February,  1919.  Adult  female  from  Ban  Kok 
Klap,  Nakon  Sri  Tamarat.  Collected  by  H.  C.  Robinson 
and  E.  Seimund  on  30th  June,  1913, 

3.  Chalcoparia  singalensis  singalensis  (Gmelin). 

M-otucillu    singalen.six     (iiiu-liii     Syst.     N;il.    I,    1789,    p.    'J64     (Malacca  : 
Obcrholser  det.)- 

Males  with  rufous  of  foreneck  and  upper  breast  as  in 
C.  s.  interposita  but  with  remaining  lower  parts  a  rather 
greener  yellow. 

Females  with  tlie  breast  and  abdomen  distinctly  greener 
than  in  koraiensis  and  interposita. 

Specimens  e.vamined  from  Pct-ak  to  Joliore,  South 
Malay  Peninsula  (12  i  ,  9  9). 

4.  Chalcoparia  singalensis  sumatrana  lvh)ss,  subsp.  nov. 

Males  with  the  rufous  of  the  foreneck  and  breast 
extending  still  fmther  down  towards  the  abdomen  and  the 
latter  more  tinged  ^^^th  green  than  in  C.  s.  singalensis. 

Females  rather  more  greenish  below  than  in  C.  s. 
.•singalensis. 

Specimens  examined  from  the  Ophu'  to  Bencoolen 
districts.  Western  Sumatra  ;  and  Deli,  North  Eastern 
Sumatra.  (9  c5  ,  5  9). 

Types.  Adult  male  from  Mi.  Talamau,  400  metres, 
and  female  from  Tanangtalu,  1,000  metres,  Ophir  district. 
Central  Sumatra.  Collected  bv  E.  Jacobson  on  27th  April, 
1917  and  10th  May,  1915.  Collector's  numbers  891  and 
4,553. 

5.  Chalcoparia  singalensis  borneana  Kloss,  subsp.  nov. 

As  in  C.  s.  interposita  but  rufous  of  the  foreneck  and 
upper  breast  rather  deeper  in  both  sexes. 

Specimens  examined  from  various  part  o>"  Sarawak. 
(195,   149). 

Types.  Adult  male  from  Bukar,  Samarahan,  Sarawak, 
obtamed  by  F.M.S,  Museums   collector  on  26th  October, 


210  Journal  of  the  F.M.S,  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

1919  ;  and  adult  female  from  Kuchiiig,  Sarawak,  obtained 
on  24th  May,  1892  (ex  Sarawak  Museum) . 

6.     Chalcoparia  singalensis  phoenicotis  (Temminck). 

S'eclariniu   phoeiticotis   Teniiiiiiick,   PI.    Col.    1824,   No.   108,   flg.    I    (cf)  ; 
No.  388  flg.  2   (?)    (Java). 

Males  as  in  C.  s.  singalensis  but  rufous  of  the  foreneck 
and  upper  breast  deeper  :  abdomens  less  bright  than  in 
C.  s..  borneana. 

Females  with  the  rufous  of  the  foreneck  much  deepei* 
than  in  the  females  of  any  other  race  (as  deep  as  in  the 
males)  ;  not  extending  on  to  the  upper  breast  and  ending 
abruptly  as  in  males  of  (^.  s.  koratensis  ;  but  still  more 
restricted.  Lower  breast  and  abdomen  bright  as  in 
koratensis  and  interposita. 

Specimens  examined  from  Rast.  Mid  and  West  Java 
(7^,3$). 

Chalcoparia  singalensis  panopsis  Oberholser  (Smiths, 
Misc.  Coll.  60,  1912,  p.  21)  of  Nias  Id.,  West  Sumatra,  is 
described  as  having  the  females  with  the  posterior  lower 
parts  more  brightly  yellowish  than  in  C.  s.  singalensis. 
It  must,  tlierefore,  be  quite  distinct  from  the  adjacent  race 
C.  s.  suniatrana. 

Of  the  males  C.  s.  koratensis,  of  the  females  C.  s. 
phoenicotis  is  the  most  distinct. 

When  I  stated.  Ibis  1918,  p.  218,  that  birds  from  the 
Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra  and  Java  were  alike  my  material 
was  inadequate,  consisting  from  the  latter  places  of  one 
Sumatran  male  only  and  four  old  mounted  males  of  faded 
colours  from  Java.  C.  s.  phoenicotis  is  a  very  distinct 
form  on  account  of  the  characters  of  the  female  :  C.  s. 
sumatrana  less  so  ;  but  sutficiently  distinguished  to  need 
separation. 

A  NEW  RACE  OF  SHAMA  FROM  JAVA, 

Kittacincla  malabarica  javana  subsp.  nov. 

Sexes  alike  in  colour  and  paler  below  than  the  males  of 
K.  m.  tricolor  (Vieillot).  Typical  locality  Bantam,  W,  Java: 
Robinson  and  Kloss  det,^)  and  with  white,  not  rusty  thighs  r 
like  the  males  of  K.  m.  omissa  Hartert  (Nov.  Zool.  IX,  1902, 
p.  572.  Lawang,  E.  Java)  but  without  the  indistinct  white 
border  to  the  black  breast. 

Types.  Adult  male  (No.  6277)  and  female  (6112) 
collected  by  C,  Boden  Kloss,  23rd  and  18th  February  1920, 

'  Extract  from  M.S.  "  We  consider  that  Vieillot'.s  citation  of  the 
locahty  of  his  Tiirdm  tricolor  (Nouv.  Diet.  Hist.  Nat.  XXX,  1818, 
p.  291)  ""les  isles  de  la  nier  du  sud "  is  at  least  as  precise  as 
llartert's  subsequent  fixation  as  "  India "  (Nov.  Zool.  IX,  1902, 
p.  571).  Further  the  description  by  Scopoli  in  1786  (Del  Flor. 
Faun.  Insubr.,  II,  p.  97)  of  the  Malabar  bird  as  Miiscicapu 
malabarica  should  prevent  "  India  "  being  selected  for  a  typical 
locality.  We  have,  therefore,  further  fixed  the  typical  locality 
of  Tardus  tricolor  as  Western  Java."  H.  C,  Robinson  and  C.  Boden 
Kloss. 


1921]       BoDEN  Kloss  :  New  and  Known  Birds.  211 

at  Karangbolang,  South  Coast  of  Mid-Java    (not  Karang- 
bolang  of  Noesa  Kambangan  Id.). 

Specimens  examined.  Three  males  and  one  female 
from  the  type  locality  :  compared  with  two  males  and  one 
female  from  Pandeglang  District,  N.  Bantam  ;  one  male 
and  one  female  from  Wynkoop's  Bay,  S.W.  Coast  of  Java  ; 
and  with  two  males  and  one  female  of  K.  m.  omissa  from 
Badjoelmati,  E.  Coast  of  Java. 

A  second  male  from  Wynkoops  Bay  is  intermediate 
between  tricolor  and  javana  ;  a  little  lighter  beiow  than 
the  first,  somew^iat  darker  than  the  latter  with  white  thighs 
slightly  washed  with  rusty. 

Hartert  states  (l.c.s.)  that  the  female  of  omissa  is 
exactly  like  the  male  in  colouration  but  my  specimen  is 
distinctly  paler  below — almost  as  pale  as  females  of  West 
Javan  tricolor.  The  female  of  javana,  being  like  the  males, 
is  darker  than  either  of  the  others. 

Measurements  of  K.  m.  tricolor  from  Pandeglang  ^ 
and  Wynkoops  Bay. 

T.  L.  ^277*,  273,  245;  ?242*,  210.  Tail,  163*,  175, 
145  ;  9  126%  105.  Wing,  3  96*,  97,  94  ;  $  90*,  85.  Tarsus. 
26*,  26,  28;  $25,  24.  Bill  from  gape,  24*,  24,  23.5; 
5  22*,  22. 

K.  m.  tricolor  >  javana  from  Wynkoops  Bay. 

T.  L.  5  261.     Tail,  142.     Wing,  97.     Tarsus,  27.     B.f.g. 

24.  o  ,  J-, 

K.  m.  javana  from  Karangbolang. 

T.  L.  s  251t,  255,  258  ;  $  206t.  Tail,  s  139t,  142,  138  ; 
9  102t.  Wing,  $  93t,  89,  92  ;  9  86t.  Tarsus,  25t,  27,  26  ; 
9  25t.     B.f .g.  23t,  23,  24  ;    9  23t. 

K.  m.  omissa  from  Badjoelmati. 

T.  L.  $  257,  245  ;  9  195.  Tail,  $  144,  130  ;  9  91.  Wing, 
cJ  92.5,  90;  9  81.  Tarsus,  5  25.5,  27.5  ;  24  ;  9  20.  B.f.g 
21,23;   9  20  mm. 

All   collected   and   measured   in    the   flesh   by   myself 
between  February  and  April  1919. 
*  Neo-types. 
t  Types. 

NEW  AND  OTHER   BIRDS  FROM  N.E.  SUMATRA. 
Amongst  a  small  collection  of  birds  from  Deli,  N.E. 
Sumatra,  and  the  Karo  lands  sent  me  for  determination  bv 
.lonkheer  F.  C.  van  Heurn  the  following  are  of  interest  : —  " 

Spizaetus  alboniger  Blyth. 

Spizaetus  alboniger  de  Beaufort,  in  "  Vers),  en  Med.  der  \ederl.  Ornitli. 
Vercen  "  No.  C   (September  1909)   Mid  Sumatra 

1  9  Bandar  Baroe,  Upper  Deh,  30.7.20.  Wing  365.  A 
fine  adult  example. 

'  A  male  has  a  large  irregular  white  patch  covering  the  side 
of  {he  tliroat  and  the  foreneck. 


212  Joiirmtl  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

HcmicerGUs  concretus  coccometopus  Reichenb, 

2  6  from  Simpang  Toba,  Asahan,  10.5.20,  and  Batani> 
Koois,  I3cli,  16.6.20.     Wings  83,  84  mm, 

Cyornis  elegans  Tenini.,  subsp.? 

1  $  from  Soengci  Tassik,  Langkat,  8.7.20.  Wing  72 
mm. 

Since  1  returned  .Tonkheer  van  Heurn's  collection  I  have 
received  Dr.  Oberholser's  description  of  Ciforms  elegans 
rupatensis  (Froc.  Biol.  Soc.  Washington,  33,  1920,  p.  87) 
from  Hupat  Strait,  about  250  miles  down  coast  from 
Langkat.  Tliis  is  stated  to  be  like  C.  e.  elegans  from 
Northern  and  Western  Sumatra,  but  mnch  darker  above 
and  on  the  throat,  breast  (iarker,  posterior  lower  parts  more 
ochraceous.  The  bird  from  Langkat  (Lat.  4"^  N.)  belongs 
to  the  typical  race. 

Eupetes  macrocerus  macrocerus  Temm. 

1  s  Soengai  Tassik,  Langkat,  30.6.20.     Wing  97. 

Not  differing  in  any  way  from  specimens  in  a  Malayan 
series. 

Ai)parantly  a  new  record  for  Snmatra  : — 
Hemichelidon  sibirica  fuliginosa. 

1  6    Karolanden,  1.000  metres,  8.11.19.     Wing  78  nnn. 

New  subspecies  : — 

1.  Pitta  granatina  vanheurni  subsp.  nov. 

J'iilti  uroiKiliiKi  dc  IJcaulort  and  do  Bussy,  Hijdr.  tot  de  Dierk.  Atl. 
\X1,  iai8  {•>),  P-  ^"ii*  (N.K.  Sumatra)  ;  Sciiouckaert,  Club  van 
Nedfil.   Vogelk.  .laarb.  No.  10,   1920,  p.   11.'.   (N.E.   Sumatra). 

Like  PHIa  gramUimi  cocrinea  Kyton,  of  the  Malay 
Peninsula  but  developing  a  markedly  larger  bill.  The  large 
bill  and  the  narrower  black  frontal  area  in  addition  still 
more  clearly  distinguish  it  from  P.  <).  qianatina  Temm. 
of  Western  Borneo. 

Wing  89,  tail  37,  tarsus  40,  bill  from  gape  30,  from 
anterior  edge  of  nostril  18  mm. 

Tijpe.  Adult  male  from  Soengai  Tassik,  Langkat,  N.E. 
Sumatra.  (Collected  by  .Jonkheer  F.  C.  van  Heurn  on  7th 
July,  1920.  (>)mpared  with  25  examples  of  P.  g.  cocrinea 
and  25  of  P.  g.  granalina. 

Jonkheer  van  Heurn  has  also  sent  a  second  male  from 
Alas  Teurba  near  Lho  Seumaweh,  Acheh  (Kith  September, 
1920)  ;  but  it  is  an  immature  bird  with  red  tips  to  many  of 
the  breast  feathers  :  wing  95  ;  tail  43  ;  tarsus  38  ;  bill  from 
gape  27,  from  anterior  edge  of  nostril  14  mm. 

2.  Thringorhina  striolata  umbrosa  subsp.  nov. 

More  russet  and  much  darker  above  than  T.  s.  striohitii 
(S.    Midler)    from    West    Suipatra    south    of    Padang    (18 


1921]         BoDEN  Kloss  :  New  and  Known  Birds.  213 

specimens  examined) :  crown,  nape,  back  (except  the  lower 
rump  which  is  russet),  wings  and  tail  being  much  more 
strongly  washed  with  black 

Three  specimen  examined,  all  from  the  same  locality. 

Type.  Adult  male  from  Bandar  Baroe,  Upper  Deli, 
N.E.  Sumatra,  800  metres.  Collected  bv  Jonkheer  F.  C.  van 
Heurn  on  21st  August  1920. 

Wing  67*,  65,  65  ;  tail  60*.  60,  62  :  tarsus  23*,  24,  28  ; 
bill  from  gape  21*,  21,  20  mm. 

The  type  locality  of  Miiller's  Timalia  striolaki  may  be 
taken  as  the  Padang  Residencies,  Central  West  Sumatra. 
'  Type. 


214  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

XL     NOTES    ON    SOME    ORIENTAL    B?RDS. 

By  C.  Boden  Kloss,  m.h.o.u.,  c.f.a.o.u. 

HALCYON   (SAUROPATIS)    CHLORIS. 

Either  together  or  separately  Mr.  H.  C.  Robinson  and 
1  have  hitherto  not  seen  our  way  to  accept  all  the  races  oi' 
Malajsian  Blue-and-white  Kingfishers  that  Dr.  H.  C. 
Oberholser  recognises  and  proposes  (Proc.  U.  S,  Nat.  Mus. 
55,  1919,  pp.  351  395).  But  now  with  about  80  specimens 
from  Bangkok,  south  through  the  Malay  P^ninsida  to 
Johore  ;  8  from  North-east  Sumatra  ;  16  from  Benkoolen, 
the  Padang  districts  and  Korinchi,  West  Sumatra  (C. 
cyanescens  Oberh.)  ;  and  18  from  all  parts  of  Java  (C 
palmeri  Oberh.)  I  have  to  revise  my  opinions  somewhat.^ 

I  cannot  perceive  all  the  differential  characters 
Oberholser  gives  in  his  key  and  diagnoses  :  however,  in  the 
large  series  of  continental  birds  I  find  a  few  males — a 
distinct  minority- — that  are  a  deeper,  less  greenish,  blue  than 
the  others  and  these  make  the  series  as  a  whole  look  more 
blue  ;  as  stated,  there  is  frequently  a  pronounced  wash  of 
buff  on  the  flanks  which  the  others  lack  :  the  continental 
birds  are  certainly  smaller :  and  so  are  eight  specimens  from 
the  Deli  district  of  North-east  Sumatra,  which  on  this 
account  I  should  rank  with  them,  though  Oberholser  says 
that  F2ast  Sumatran  birds  as  far  north  as  Deli  are 
(tyanescens.  The  wings  of  my  continental  birds  range 
from  97  'to  106  mm.  ;  those  of  the  Deli  examples  from  96 
to  104  mm. :  and  those  of  the  West  Sumatra  specimens  from 
104  to  112  mm. 

Oberholser  considers  that  bii-ds  from  the  Sunderbunds 
to  Singapore  are  all  armstrongi  (type,  a  Siamese  skin  of 
Gould's  collection),  and  that  birds  called  luimii  by  Sharpe 
(type,  a  Selangor  bird  of  Hume's  collection)  are  insepai-- 
able  :  but  I  find,  on  the  contrary,  that  the  great  majority 
of  birds  from  the  Malay  Peninsula  have  the  earcoverts  morl' 
blackish,  or  of  a  darker  different  bhie,  than  the  birds  of  the 
Inner  Gulf  of  Siam  which  have  the  earcoverts  of  the  same 
blue  as  the  crown  though  sometimes  a  trifle  darker  in  tint  ; 
and  on  this  ground,  and  because  of  a  deeper  huffy  wash  on 
the  flanks  and  of  a  pronounced  black  nuchal  band  in  most 
of  the  specimens  (obsolete  or  absent  in  the  Siamese  birds) 
hiimii  may  be  maintained  for  birds  of  the  Peninsula,  south 
of  the  Isthmus  of  Kra  and  for  those  of  North-east  Sumatra. 
There  seems  to  be  no  difference  in  size  :  the  wings  of  the 
24  more  Northern  birds  (armstrongi)  range  from  98  to 
106  mm.  ;  those  of  the  Peninsular  series  from^97  to  106  mm. 
and  those  of  the  Sumatran  set  of  Inimii  from  96  to  104  mm. 

Sauropatis  clitoris  cyanescens  Oberh.  (op.  cit.  52,  1917 
p.  189  :  type  from  Pulau  1  aya.  Southern  China  Sea,  north 

'  1  am  indebted  to  Mr.  W.  .1.  F.  Williamson,  c.m.g.,  for  the  loan 
of  24  examples  from  the  head  of  the  Gulf  of  Siam  ;  to  Heer  E. 
Jacobson  for  a  dozen  from  West  Sumatra  and  to  Heer.  A.  G  F.  A, 
van  Heyst  for  examples  from  North-east  Sumatra. 


1921]  BoDEN  Kloss  :  Notes  on  Birds.  215 

of  Banka  Id.)  is  defined  as  from  Sumatra  to  Borneo  and 
the  islands  along  its  east  coast  with  all  the  intervening 
islands  ;  also  Bawean  and  various  islets  in  the  Java  Sea. 
Placed  with  this  race  must  be  a  pair  from  Pulau  Mapur, 
the  easternmost  island  in  the  Bhio  Archipelago  south  of 
Singapore,  (wings  110  mm.). 

Apart  from  colour  differences  which  I  cannot  find, 
S.  c.  palmeri  Oberh.  (tom.  cit.  p.  368  :  tvpe  from  Mt.  Salak, 
W.  Java  :  supposed  to  be  confined  to  Java),  is  said  to  be 
distinguished  from  cyunescens  by  a  slightly  smaller  bill  : 
the  measurements  given  for  the  exposed  culmen^  are  : — 
cyanescens  (75  examples)  41. 5-47.3* -53.5  mm.  ;  palmeri 
(25  specimens)  42.5-45.9 *-50  mm.  [i.e.,  within  the  range 
of  cyanescens].  The  bills  from  gape  of  my  West  Mid- 
Sumatran  specimens  of  cyanescens  measure  :-  52-56.4*- 
()()  mm.  ;  of  my  Javan  birds  55-57.2*-60  mm.  :  the  converse 
of  Oberholser's  findings. 

Averages  seem  to  be  untrustworthy  as  they  differ 
with  different  series  :  both  series  attain  similar  maxima 
and  the  smaller-billed  Sumatran  birds  may  be  immature 
though  they  have  no  appearance  of  this.  I  cannot  separate 
the  Javan  birds  before  me  from  cyanescens  :  my  series  of 
the  former  has  a  wing  range  of  103-116,  and  the  latter 
104-112  mm. 

HALCYON    (ENTOMOTHERA)    COROMANDA. 

Dr.  Oberholser  has  also  reviewed  the  races  of  the 
Ruddy  Kingfisher,  Halcyon  (Entomothera)  coromanda 
(op.  cit.  48,  1915,  pp.  639-657)  and  of  Malaysian  races  which 
he  recognises,  we  have  material  of  the  following  : — 

1.     Halcyon  coromanda  coromanda  (Lath.). 

Southern  continental  birds  are  all  considered  to  belong 
to  this  subspecies,  which  occupies  Indo-China  ajid  the  Malay 
Peninsula,  south  to  Malacca  :  Rangoon  is  selected  for  the 
type  locality. 

Tills  is  the  largest  of  the  Malaysian  forms  and  the  palest 
both  above  and  below,  being  not,  or  comparatively  little, 
washed  with  magenta  on  the  breast  [and  on  the  upper 
surface,  especially  the  head].  The  wing  length  ranges 
from  111  to  119  mm.  [Nine  practically  adult  specimens 
examined  by  Oberholser,  five  from  India,  one  from  China, 
three  from  the  Malay  Peninsula]. 


'  I  do  not  like  this  measurement  :  the  posterior  point  is  not 
iixecl  as  the  forward  spread  of  the  frontal  feathers,  it  is  very 
variable.  For  instance,  in  two  birds  which  have  the  same  length  of 
bill  from  the  gape  and  from  the  anterior  edge  of  the  nostril,  there 
is  a  difference  of  3  mm.  in  the  length  of  the  exposed  culmen.  Both 
of  the  lengths  mentioned,  which  are  between  fixed  points,  are 
preferable. 

*  Average.  . 


216  Journal  of  ihe  F.M.S    Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

2.     Halcyon  coromanda  minor  (Tcmm.  &  Sclil.) 

This  is  recognised  as  inhabiting  Borneo  with  various 
coastal  islands,  and  also  Singapore.  Pontianak  is  selected 
as  the  typical  locality. 

It  is  a  darker  bird,  particularly  below  and  also  mucli 
more  washed  with  magenta  on  head  and  upper  parts 
generally] :  it  is  also  smaller,  the  w'ings  ranging  from  99  to 
104  mm.  I  Five  adult  specimens  examined  by  Oberholser, 
three  from  Borneo,  two  from  Singapore]. 

We  have  no  examples  of  West  Sumatran  birds  which 
are  named  by  Oberholser  coromanda  neophora  (type 
locality,  Tapanuli  Bay,  Western  Sumatra,  opposite  Nias  Id.) : 
they  are  characterised  as  being  like  c.  coromanda,  but 
smaller  ;  lower  parts  darker  and  breast  Jiiore  washed  with 
magenta,  wings  100  111  mm.  [Five  practically  adult 
specimens  examined  by  Oberholser,  two  only  from  Western 
Sumatra].  The  habitat  is  given  as  Sumatra  ;  and  probably 
Banka  Id.  This  race  appears  on  the  characters  given  to  be 
very  like  minor,  but  a  little  larger  [and  perhaps  paler 
above]  :  but  Obserholser's  material  was  small  in  both  cases. 

It  has  already  been  pointed  out'  that  all  Sumatran  birds 
are  not  neophora  ;  four  examples  from  Deli  in  the  North- 
east of  Sumatra  being  undoul)te<lly  c.  coromanda,  (though 
Oberholser  regards  his  only  specimen  from  N.  E.  Sumatra, 
a  juvenile  female  from  Aru  Bay,  a  little  to  the  north  of 
Deli,  as  neophora) .  This  is  not  surprising  as  birds  taken 
on  Pulau  Jarak,  the  Aroa  Islands  and  the  One-fathom  Bank 
LightJiouse  in  the  Straits  of  Malacca  are  c.  coromanda  and 
it  is  highly  improbable  that  they  were  resident  on  any  of 
these  places. 

Thus  the  range  of  c.  coromanda  must  be  extended  to 
North-east  Sumatra. 

To  the  distribution  area  of  minor  must  be  added 
Johore,  birds  from  the  south  of  that  State  being  indistin- 
guishable from  those  of  Singapore  Island  adjticent.^ 

The  wing  measurements  of  our  specimens  are  : — 

H.  c.  coromanda  : — 

Malay  Peninsula,  Langkawi  and  Terutau  Ids. 

(8  spnis.)  ..  ..  ..  105— 116  mm. 

vStraits  of  Malacca  (17  spnis.)       ..  ..  112—118    „ 

North-east  Sumatra  (4  spnis.)     . .  . .  110 — 117    „ 

H.  c.  minor  : — 

Borneo  (2  spnis.)  . .  . .  . .   100—102  „ 

Sins^apore  (4  spms.)  . .  . .  . .   102 — 104  „ 

Johore  (4  spnis.)  ..  ..  ..103—111  „ 

Dr.  Oberholser's  measurements  for  the  wings  of  his 
two  topotypes  of  neophora  are  ;   $  100,  ?  vix  ad.  Ill  mm. 


'  Ilulcijon    coromanda   coromanda   Robinson   &    Kloss,   Journ. 
Straits  Branch  Hoy.  Asiat.  Soc.  No.  80.  1919,  p.  87. 

'  Harlert  has  alreacb  stated  that  birds  from  the  southern  part 
of  the  Malay  Peninsula  are  minor  (Yog.  pal.  Fauna,  II,  1912,  p.  887). 


1921]  BoDEN  Kloss  :  Notes  on  Birds.  217 

It  seems  to  ine  that  a  difference  between  Bornean  and 
Sumatran  birds  is  as  yet  "  not  proven  "  :  Dr.  Oberholser's 
material  from  each  place  was  very  limited  and  it  may  be 
noted  that  he  was  nnable  to  distinguish  between  specimens 
of  Halcyon  chloris  from  those  areas. 

CHRYSOCOLAPTES    STRICTUS     CHERSONESUS     Kloss. 
Ibis,  1918,  p.  113  (Singapore  and  Johore). 

Chrysocolaples  giitlicristaius  chersoiiesus  Robinson,  Ibis,  1919,  p.   181  ; 

Robinson   and    Kloss,   Journ.    Straits    Branch   Roy.    Asiat.    See.   No. 

81,  19'20,  p.   80. 
Chrysocolapies  gutficrisiains  d>!  Beaufort  and  de  Bussy,  Konink.  Zool. 

Cenoots,  "  Natura  Artis  Magister  "  XXI,  1918   (?)   p.  25V. 
Chryaocolaplfs  gnltacristalns  delexserli  Baker  Ibis  1919,  p.  197. 

Mr.  Stuart  Baker  denies  the  validity  of  this  race,  because 
he  behevcs  that  birds  from  Johore  have  wings  as  long  as 
170  mm.  :  but  he  has  evidently  made  a  bad  geographical 
error  in  attributing  to  the  extreme  south  of  tlie  Malay 
Peninsula,  the  specimens  which  he  thinks  come  from  Johore 
(Query  :  Jalor  in  Patani). 

This  subspecies,  described  on  account  of  itv  small  size, 
has  now  been  found  to  extend  to  the  islands  of  the  Rio 
Archipelago  and  to  Sumatra.  I  have  examined  the  follow- 
ing specimens  : — 

c?  Si  Karang,  Johore  (cotype). 

d- 

c?  Singapore  Island  (cotype). 

—  Kundur  Id.,  Rio  Arch. 
<S  Deli  Dist.  N.E.  Sumatra. 

Wings  143-146*-150  mm.  Bills  from  gape  43-45*-48 
mm. 

PHILENTOMA  VEI.ATA  CAESIA  (Less.). 

The  type  locality  of  Dryniophila  oelata  Temm.  (PI. 
Col.,  No.  334,  1825),  is  Java  as  the  species  does  not  occur 
ill  Timor  or  the  Moluccas. 

Birds  from  Sumatra,  Malay  Peninsula  and  Borneo 
differ  from  those  of  Java  in  having  more  black  on  the 
throats  in  males  ;  while  the  throats  of  females  are  blackish 
blue,  distinctly  darker  than  the  breasts. 

Birds  from  each  of  these  areas  have  received  a  name  as 
follows  : — 

Monarrhu  cuesia  I>ess.,  Rev.   Zool.  1839,  p.    167    (Sumatra). 

Muscicapa  pecloralis  Hay,  Madras  Journ.  XIII,  1844,  p.   101    (Malacca). 

Philcniunia   unicolor   BIyth,   Ibis   186.5,   p.   46    (Borneo). 

But  all  are  alike  and  all  must  stand  as  caesia. 
Specimens  examined.     Java,  4  5,  5  $   ;   Sumatra,  3  $  , 
3  $  ;  Malay  Peninsula  12  5  ,  15  $  ;  Borneo,  3  5,39 

*  Average. 


Wing  150. 

Bill  from  gape  45 

„     14a 

>? 

43 

„     143. 

>» 

48 

„      146. 

» 

45 

",     150. 

'!        48 

„     143. 

,j 

43 

218  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

PHILENTOxMA  PYRRHOPTERA   (Temm.). 

Philentoma  saravacense  Bartlett,  Sarawak  Note-book,  pt. 
IX  (1896),  p.  80. 

Tliis  name  was  given  by  Barllett  to  a  blue  flycatcher 
from  the  neighbourhood  of  Kuching.  I  have  seen  the  type, 
a  male,  which  belongs  to  the  Sarawak  Museum.  It  is  of 
exactly  the  same  size  as  Philentoma  pyrrhoptera 
[Muscicapa  pyrrhoptera  Temm.,  PI.  Col.  1823,  No.  596,  fig. 
2  (error !  read  1)  Borneo  and  Sumatra  i,  but  is  of  the  same 
blue  all  over  as  the  foreparts,  except  on  the  abdomen  where 
the  blue  of  the  breast  gradually  changes  more  or  less  into 
sullied  white. 

Agreeing  with  the  type  are  six  other  specimens  for 
the  moment  in  my  hands  : — a  male  and  female  (?)  from 
Sarawak,  Iwo  males  from  the  Malay  States,  and  Iwo  males 
from  Sumatra.  One  of  the  Malayan  specimens  has  the 
flanks  slightly  tinged  with  russet. 

It  has  been  suggested  that  this  bird  is  the  young  of 
P.  uelata,  but  1  am  sure  (his  is  not  so.  It  belongs  to  P. 
pyrrhoptera,  of  which,  it  seems  to  be  an  aberration — though 
as  shown  a  comparatively  common  one- and  is  not  a  dis- 
tinct species.  The  colour  of  the  young  male  P.  pyrrhoptera 
is  apparantly  that  of  the  adult  female  but  rather  paler  on 
the  throat. 

Philentoma  intermedius  Hume,  Stray  Feathers,  IX,  1880, 
p.  113. 

This  name  was  given  to  a  female  from  Johore — an 
aberration  like  that  named  saravacense  by  Bartlett.  As 
usual  Hinne's  description  is  very  full. 

Philentoma  maxwelli  Bartlett  Journ.  Straits  Branch  Royal 
Asiatic  Soc.  No.  28,  1895,  p.  96. 

This  name  was  given  also  to  a  Sarawak  bird  which 
is  an  ordinary  male  P.  pyrrhoptera  except  for  an  irregular 
chestnut  patch  on  one  side  of  the  blue  breast — ^an  abnor- 
mality 1  find  in  a  Malayan  example  as  well.  I  am  indebted 
to  the  authorities  of  the  Sarawak  Musemn  for  lendmg  me 
the  Bornean  types  of  the  synonyms.  Malaysian  birds  are 
not  separable  into  subspecies. 

CRYPTOLOPHA  TRIVIRGATA. 

Since  we  commented  on  Sumatran  examples  of 
Cryptolopha  trivirgata  (Journ.  Fed.  Malay  States  Mus. 
VIII,  pt.  2,  1918,  p.  167),  the  F.M.S.  Museums  have  obtained 
a  large  series  of  this  bird  from  .lava  and  now  comparing 
with  them  an  equally  large  Sumatran  series,  I  can  detect  no 
differences  :  the  birds  of  the  Siuida  Islands  are  larger  than 
other  Malaysian  birds  and  are  of  tlie  typical  form  C.  t. 
trivirgata  (Strickl.,  type  locality,  Java)\ 

'See,  however,  Nov.  Zool.  XXVII,  1920,  p.  462  where  Hartert 
States  there  is  no  difFerence  in  wing  length.  But  tlie  series  on 
which  my  remarks  are  based  is  much  larger  than  any  other 
assembled. 


1921]  BoDEN  Kloss  :  Notes  on  Birds.  219 

In  1912  Dr.  E.  Stresemann  found  that  Malayan  birds 
were  smaller  than  the  Sondaic  form  and  named  them 
Phylloscopus  t.  pnrvirostvis  (Nov.  Zool.  XIX,  p.  322,  Mt. 
Tahan,  5,200  ft.).  He  omitted,  however,  to  compare  them 
with  Bornean  material,  named  bv  Sharpe  C.  t.  kinahalaense 
(Bull.  B.O.C.  XI,  1901,  p.  60).^  Sharpe  described  this  as 
having  a  duller  crown  stripe,  whitish  underparts  and  a  less 
yellow  colour  generally. 

But  when  referring  his  material  earlier  to  Cnjptolopha 
trivirgata  (Ibis,  1888,  p.  202),  Sharpe  noted  that  amongst 
it,  besides  specimens  as  described,  were  a  few  examples  of 
typical  appearance  :  and  he  surmised  that  the  latter  were 
young  birds.  1  think  the  reverse  is  more  probably  correct 
for  I  have  immature  specimens  from  Java  and  the  Peninsula 
whicli  approximate  to  his  description. 

An  adult  skin  (wing  56  mm.)  from  Gunong  Tanabo, 
N.  Sarawak,  does  not  ditt'er  from  Malayan  birds  :  one 
cannot  dogmatise  with  a  single  specimen,  but  if  it  is  typical 
of  the  aduH  C.  t.  kinabaluense  then  Malayan  birds  maj^  have 
to  bear  that  name  with  C.  t.  parviroslns  as  a  synonym. 

LALAGE  FIMBRIATA. 

I  have  been  able  to  bring  together  series  of  Lalage 
fimbriata  (Temm.)  from  Java,  Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra 
and  Borneo.  There  is  some  lack  of  uniformity  in  each 
series,  because  immature  males  are  paler  than  fully  adult 
males  in  some  races  ;  but  having  regard  to  adult  birds  only 
my  conclusions  are  as  follows  : — 

1.  Lalage  fimbriata  fimbriata  (Temm.). 

Cehlephyris  fimbriata  Teiiiminck   PI.   Col.   Nos.   249    (d)    and   250    (?). 
Java. 

Males  perhaps  a  little  darker  than  males  from  Malacca, 
Sumatra  and  Borneo,  but  only  doubtfully  so. 

Females  distinct  :  darker  below,  but  less  clearly  banded 
(bars  greyer,  less  black)  owing  to  a  general  grey  suffusion 
or  clouding  except  on  the  throat  and  under  tail-coverts 
where  the  ground  colour  is  white. 

The  largest  form  :  wings  99-107  mm.  (9  5,  4  2). 
Confined  to  Java. 

2.  Lalage  fimbriata  culminata  (Hay). 

Ceblepliyris   ciilminalux   Ihiy,    Madras   Journ.    Lit.   &   Sci.   XUI,    1844,   p. 
l.')?.  Malacca. 

Males  not  distinguishable  from  Javanese  males. 
Females  nuich  whiter  and  more  clearly  banded  below. 

.M   M?l'.'^^ '.  ^^^^'^y  Peninsula,  95-100  (2  5   4$)  ;  Sumatra 
91-98   (b  6    S9). 

The  Malay  Peninsula  south  of  Lat.  3°  N.  and  Sumatra 

3.  Lalage  fimbriata  schierbrandi   (Pelz.). 

Volvocivora    schicrbrandii    Pelzcln    Novara    Reis.    Vogoln,    18C;>     p     80 

taf.   11,  fig.    1.     Bonu'o. 
Volvocivora  barneensis  Salva.lori,  Atti   U.  Ac.   Sc.  Tor.  lU,  1808,  p.  532. 

Borneo. 


220  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

Abdomen  and  undcrlail-covcrts  in  males  a  tritle  paler 
than  in  cither  f.  fimhriata  or  culminata  ;  but  Jess  white 
than  in  neglecla. 

I'emales  inseparable  from  those  of  culminata 

I'he  smallest  form  :  wings  90-95  mm.  (9  ,5  3  9  from 
Sarawak). 

Confined  to  Borneo, 

4.     Lalage  fimbriata  neglecta  (Hume) 

Volnocit'oru  m-glccia   IIuiiic,  Stray    Feathers,  V,   1877,  p.   203.     Extreme 
south   of  Tenasserim. 

Males  paler  grey  throughout  than  those  of  the  above 
three  races  ;  heads  and  mantles  not  becoming  blackish  • 
abdomens  and  imdertail-coverts  white  or  whitish. 

Females  inseparable  from  all  but  the  Javan  race. 

Wings  94-106  mm.  (IO5   8$). 

From  Southern  Tenasserim  down  to  about  Lat,  6°  N. 
in  the  Malay  Peninsula.' 

Males  from  between  Lat.  6°  and  3°  N.  in  the  Peninsula 
are  intermediate  between  culminata  and  neglecta,  but  on 
the  wlioie  are  nearest  the  latter  :  in  tlie  abdomen  and  lower 
tail-coverts  they  resemble  schierhrandi,  but  do  not  appear 
to  develop  the  dark  head  and  back  of  the  Bornean  bird. 
Wings  94-105  (5  6  0  5  ) . 

MALACOCINCLA    SEPIARIA. 

In  the  Trans.  Linn.  Soc.  (XIII,  1822,  p.  158)  Horsfield 
described  Braclujpteryx  sepiaria  from  Java  and  in  the 
Zeitschrift  fin-  de  (iesammte  Ornitbologie  (I,  1884,  p.  21) 
Meyer  described  Turdinus  sepiarius  var.  minor  from  the 
same  island.  In  Notes  from  the  Leyden  Museum  (XVII, 
1895,  p.  82)  Buttikofer  considered  that  the  latter  autlior 
could  rightly  do  tliis  as  Horsfield's  sepiaria  was  the  paler- 
headed  bird.     This  is  actually  the  case. 

I  recently  obtained  in  .lava,  birds  which  Mr.  E.  C.  Stuart 
Baker  has  kindly  compared  for  me  with  Horsfield's  types 
in  the  British  Museum.  The  latter  represent  tlie  paler- 
headed  form,  so  I  am  now  able  to  definitely  state  that 
Malacocincla  sepiaria  sepiaria  (Horsf.)  is  the  Western  and 
Malacocincla  sepiaria  minor  (Meyer)  the  Eastern  .Javanese 
form. 

Though  the  individuals  of  Meyer's  type  series  have 
wings  much  smaller  than  my  specimens,  or  an}^  others  on 
record  from  .lava,  it  is  accepted  that  they  do  represent  a 
form  of  sepiaria. 

Wing  measurements  of  my  specimens. 

1 .  From  West  Java  (W  ynkoops  Bay  and  Pandeglang 
district) ;  66,  67,  67,  68,  69,  71,  73-5  mm.        M.  s.  sepiaria 

'  I  liave  seen  an  undoubted  example  of  L.  f.  'culniinatn  from 
l*atani,  however,  .showing  tliat  this  race  and  neqlecta  may 
(occasionally)  inosculate  as  well  as  intergrade. 


1921]  RoDEN  Kloss  :  Notes  on  Birds.  221 

2.  From  East  Java  (Bali  Strait  to  Idjen  Massif)  ;  67, 
08,  68,  74  mm.  M.  s.  minor 

3.  From  Mid  Java  (Karongbolang  on  the  S.  Coast,  40 
miles  E.  of  Tjilitjap)  ;  72,  68,  76  mm.  These  are  truly 
typical  of  neither  form  :  the  first  might  be  placed  with 
.s'.  sepiaria,  the  others  with  .v.  minor. 

Meyer  gives  wings  of  61-64  mm.  for  minor  ;  70-72 
mm.  for  sepiaria  :  but  there  is  no  real  difference  in  size  as 
Butlikofer  points  out.  See  also  Finsch  (Notes  Leyd.  Mus. 
XXII,  p.  220)  who  finds  the  wings  to  vary  indiscriminately 
from  65  to  74  mm.  as  I  do. 

Except  on  the  heads  the  colour  differences  given  by 
Meyer  are  not  visible  in  the  freshly  collected  series. 

CHIBIA  HOTTENTOTTA. 

1  S  ad.,  1  S  imm.,  2  9  imm.,  1  $  juv.  Badjoelmati,  30 
miles  north  of  Banjoewangi,  F^ast  Java,  31st  January — 7th 
February,  1920. 

Total  length  ($  S,  9  9)  308,  300,  285,  288.  Tail,  144, 
137,  128,  125.^  Wing,  155,  153,  150,  143.  Tarsus,  25,  25.5, 
25,  24.  Bill  from  gape,  38,  38,  37,  35  ;  from  nostril,  25,  23, 
22.5,  22  nmi. 

"  Iris,  adult  male  yellowish  white,  immature  birds  dark. 
Bill  black,  tip  and  gape  whitish  in  immature  birds.  Feet 
black." 

The  immature  specimens  lack  the  spangles  on  the  head 
and  breast  and  have  no  frontal  hairs,  shoulder  plumes  or 
curled  tail  feathers. 

The  colour  and  plumage  characters  of  this  bird  are 
exactly  those  of  C.  hottcniolta  (which  occurs  on  the 
(^.ontinent  as  far  south  as  South  Tenasserim  and  Cochin- 
CJiina  only  ;  for  this  species  is  another  instance  of  that 
interesting  anomaly  in  distribution  in  which  a  number  of 
species  common  in  Indo-C.hina  are  absent  in  the  Malay 
Peninsula,  but  appear  again  in  Java  and  sometimes  in 
Borneo  and  Sumatra)  and  apparently  of  lencops,  Wallace, 
of  Celebes  and  pectoral i.s  Wallace,  of*  the  Xulla  Islands.  In 
the  shape  of  the  bill  it  agrees  with  the  two  last,  the  bill 
being  higher,  less  tapering  and  more  keeled  than  in  con- 
tinental birds  :  it  is  in  fact  the  bill  of  the  so-called 
Dicruropsis  smnatniniis  (Wardl  .  Rams.)  somewhat 
elongated  ;  and  larger  of  coui'se,  to  agree  with  the  size  of 
the  bird.  Except  for  larger  size  and  perhaps  a  propor- 
tionately slightly  lieavier  bill,  it  scarcelv  differs  from 
l)(>rneen.sis  Sharpe. 

The  iris  is  yellowish  while,  lluis  closelv  agreeing  with 
lencops. 

I  cannot  definitely  determine  the  form  for  lack  of 
material  and  literature  :  from  the  Thousand  Islands  at  the 
N.W.  end  of  Java  termeuleni  has  been  described  l)y  Finsch 
and  from  Kangean  Id.,  at  the  N.E.  end,  jentinki,  bv 
Vorderman. 


222  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Miiseiins.       [Vol.  X, 

The  specimens  constitute  a  new  record  for  Java.  I 
Jiave  no  hesitation  in  including  them  in  Chihia  for  there 
seems  to  me  no  reason  why  those  birds  which  have  been 
placed  in  Dicniropsis  should  be  excluded  from  the  earlier 
genus  :  all  link  up  too  closely  to  be  separated.  Sharpe  long 
ago  expressed  the  same  opinion  with  regard  to  the  genus 
of  these  birds  (P.Z.S.  1879,  p.  247). 

Since  Mr.  Stuart  Baker  published  the  results  of  his 
studv  of  continental  material  of  the  species  Chihia 
hoitenlotta  (Nov.  Zool.  XXVI,  1919,  p.  44),  I  have  been 
able  to  examine,  side  by  side  with  the  specimens  in  the 
F.M.S.  Museums,  the  collection  of  these  birds  belonging 
to  the  Indian  Museum. 

On  the  whole  this  material  confirms  Baker's 
conclusions  (except  that  being  smaller  the  series  shows  a 
smaller  range  in  dimensions  and  presents  one  or  two 
anomalies'),  viz.,  that  in  the  North  of  India  from  the 
Northwest  to  the  Eastern  Himalayas  and  Assam — and 
perhaps  North  Burnia  and  the  Shan  States  the  birds  are, 
on  the  whole,  larger  ;  whereas  in  Bombay,  Central  India, 
Bengal,  South  Burma  and  Siam  to  Cochin-China  and  Annam 
they  average  not  so  large. 

But  investigation  of  material  should  go  hand  in  hand 
with  investigation  of  literature  and  Baker  has  omitted  a 
study  of  the  latter.     It  is  certainly  a  less  interesting  pursuit. 

It  is  open  to  anyone  to  select  a  type  locality  for  a  form 
which  has  been  described  without  one  and  often,  of  course, 
it  is  largely  a  matter  of  chance  whether  the  choice  made 
is  anywhere  near  correct  :  but  the  selection  should  at  least 
have  the  appearance  of  probability.  As  the  type  locality 
for  a  bird  known  to  Brisson  and  Lumeus  Sikkim  seems  so 
improbable  .that  the  fixation  may  be  tlisregarded. 

But  in  this  case  there  is  another  reason  for  rejecting 
it.  As  a  type-locality  the  region  including  Sikkim  io 
preoccupied.  Baker  considers  birds  from  Nepal,  Sikkim 
and  Bhutan  to  be  alike  and  the  Nepal  bird  has  bc'n  described 
by  Gould  as  Edolius  chrishna  (P.Z.S.  1836,  p.  5)  and  by 
Hodgson  as  Edolius  casia  (Indian  Review,  1,  1836-7,  p. 
324).  Until  the  longer-winged,  longer-billed  northern  birds 
are  separated  into  races  by  some  reviser  the  name  they  must 
all  beai*  is  Chihia  hottrntoita  chrishna  (Gould) . 

Other  places  which  are  perhai)s  debarred  from  selection 
as  tyi>e  localities  of  the  original  form  are  Borabhum  and 
Dholbhum,  Chota  Nagpur,  (Criniger  splendens  llckell, 
Journ.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal  II,  1833",  p.  574)  ;  and  Bengal 
(Calcutta),  the  locality  given  by  Latham  for  his  Crishna 
Crow  (Gen.  Hist.  Birds,  III.  1822,  j).  51,  pi.  XI)  which  is 
the  same  as  Edolius  harhatus  Grav  (Zool.  Misc.,  1831, 
p.  34). 

*  Specimen  from  Upper  Burma,  wing  166,  bill  from  nostril  2B  ; 
from  Loisampa,  Shan  States,  wing  180,  bill  from  nostril,  26  (if  is 
possible  that  more  material  may  show  these  lo  be  tbe  Chinese 
form)  :  from  South  of  Irawadi,  wing  179,  bill  29  mm, 


1921]  BoDEN  Kloss  :  Notes  on  Birds.  223 

J'or  the  IjTpe  locality  of  Chibia  h.  hottentotta  I  select 
Siam.  As  in  the  case  of  Cuciihis  (Dissemiiriis)  paradiseus. 
Linneus  based  the  species  on  Brisson  who  recorded  Siam 
as  the  native  country  of  the  latter  bird.  In  Journ.  Nat. 
Hist.  Soc.  Siam,  Illf  1919,  p.  453,  I  restricted  the  type 
locality  to  the  region  between  Ayuthia  and  the  head  of  the 
Gulf  and  now  select  the  same  district  for  C.  h.  hottentotta. 
Mr.  W.  J.  F.  Williamson  has  obtained  specimens  from  near 
Bangkok  (t.c.s.  p.  45) . 

As  thus  localised  C.  h.  hottentotta  comes  nearest,  of 
recognised  races,  to  C  h.  brevirostris  of  China  (type  locality 
Chusan),  but  has  a  rather  longer  bill,  but  somewhat  shorter 
wing. 

It  seems  that  there  are  (1)  in  the  north  a  larger  bird 
with  (a)  a  large  bill  in  the  Himalayas  (chrishna  Gould) 
and  (b)  a.  small  bill  in  China  {brevirostris  Cabanis)  :  (ii) 
in  the  south  a  rather  smaller  bird  with  a  bill  of  intermediate 
size  {hottentotta  Linn.).  Whether  the  bird  of  Bombay  and 
Central  India  in  distinct  requires,  as  Mr.  Baker  says,  a  larger 
series  than  is  available  to  show.  I  fancy  it  is  not  :  the  few 
measurements  given  are  well  within  the  range  of  a  series 
from  Burma  and  Siam. 

Thus  we  have  on  the  Continent  at  present : — 

C.  h.  hottentotta  S.  Indo-China  and  Peninsula  India. 

C.  h.  chrishna  Himalayas,  etc. 

C.  h.  brevirostris  I^astern  China. 

MALAYSIAN   CROWS. 
CORVUS  CORONOIDES. 

To  a  number  of  the  "  Verhandlungen  der  Ornithologis- 
chen  Gesellschaft  in  Bayern,"  received  only  recently,  Dr. 
Erwin  Stresemann  contributes  a  long  and  interesting  paper 
oq  the  forms  of  the  groups  Corvus  coronoides  Vig.  &  Horsf . 
(Band  XII,  Heft  4,  May  1916,  pp.  277-304). 

The  following  is  a  rough  translation  of  the  parts  with 
which  this  note  deals  : — 

(p.  284).    Corvus  coronoides  andamanensis  Beavan. 

Corvus    andamanensis    Beavau    ex    Tytler    MS.     [Ibis    1806,    p.    420 — 
.\ndamaus  :   nomen  nudum  !]     Ibis  1867,  p.  328 — Andamans. 

Like  C.  c.  intermedius,  but  on  the  average  with  shorter 
wings  and  a  longer,  higher  bill.  Base  of  feathers  in  adults 
more  or  less  pronounced  white,  never  grey. 

Length  'of  wings  :  Assam  :  328,  337.  Upper  Burma  : 
294-343  (6  examples)  2.  Tenasserim  :  279-343.  (Average 
of  12  examples:  312.8).  Penang :  331.  Andamans: 
292-341  (Average  of  10  examples  :  313.1).. 

'  Or  species,  as  I  should  probably  say.    C.B.K. 
'I    have    omitted    a    number    of    individual    measurements 
throughout.    C.B>K. 


224  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X 

Length  of  bill  :  Assam  61,  62.  Burma  :  57,  58. 
'1  enasserim  :  58.5,  Penang,  60.  Aiidamans  :  54-62.5 
(Average  of  13  examples  :  58.5) .  Average  of  20  examples  : 
58.9. 

Height  of  bill  :  Minimum  20.5,  maximum  24.1. 
Average  of  22  examples  :  22.2. 

Distribution  :  Assam  and  Burma,  southwards  to 
Tenasserim  and  Penang'  ;  Andamans.  The  range  of  the 
form  probably  extends  to  the  northern  part  of  the  Malay 
Peninsula  also  though  no  examples  seem  as  yet  available. 
iVll  crows  which  I  have  seen  in  Museums  from  the  Malay 
Peninsula  and  those  which  I  shot  in  Perak  myself  were 
Corims  enca  compilator  Richmond.  It  is,  therefore,  not 
clear  how  one  should  regard  the  "  Corvus  macrorhynchus  " 
which  Robinson  and  Kloss  record  in  Ibis  1911,  p.  71,  as 
"  very  abundant  in  Trang  and  also  in  Langkawi  and 
Terutau  "  especially  as  these  investigators  add  the  astonish- 
ing remark  "  From  Perak  southwards  to  Johor  the  Slender- 
Ijilled  crow,  Corvus  enca  Horsf.,  occurs,  but  is  very  rare, 
only  three  or  four  specimens  having  been  obtained  "  ( !) .  A 
transfer  of  names  between  the  two  species  appears  to  me 
as  not  improbable. 

(p.  287).     Corvus  coronoides  macrorhynchus  Wagl. 

sp.  .'!    ( 1S27— .liiva.     Type   in  the  .Municli    Muspuin).^ 
Corvus    macrorhiinrliii.s    Wagler    i>.\    Tcinniinck    MS.,    Syst.    Av.    Corvus 
Corvus  limorensis  JJonaparto.  (lonipt.  Rend.  37,  p.  829   (1853 — Timor). 

Like  C  r.  andamanensis  and  intermedius,  but  with  biU 
of  different  shape  :  bill  at  the  base  about  as  high  as  over 
the  nostrils.  Base  of  the  feathers  in  adults  always  white, 
in  young  birds  brownish  wiiite.     Iris  brown. 

Examples  from  the  Timor  group  do  not  appear  to 
completely  agree  with  birds  from  the  typical  locality  :  but 
differ  in  having  a  shorter  bill  on  the  average,  clearer  white 
bases  to  the  featliers  and  a  rather  stronger  gloss  below  , 
but  the  Javanese  material  1  have  examined^  is  insuilicienl 
for  me  to  decide  the  question. 

Length  of  wings  : 

•lava  :    335,    350.      Bali  :    356.      Kangean  :    320,    365. 
Lombok  :  353.     Lomblen  :  328,  348.     Alor  :  340.     Wetai'  : 
320-347    (6  examples).      Timor  :   314-335    (4   examples) 
Savu  :  324.     Sumba  :  323. 


u  :  324.     Sumba  :  323. 
Average  of  26  examples  :  336.4. 


'The    British   Mu.seum   po.s.ses.se.s   two   examples   from    Pcnani;, 
Col].  A.  R.  Wallace  and  Dr.  Cantor.     E.  S. 

'  Cf.  Parrot,  Zool.  .lahrb.,  Abt.  Syst.  etc.,  23,  190(),  p.  272. 

"  One  example  oni>  .     C.B.K. 


1921]  BoDEN  Kloss  :  Notes  on  Birds.  225 

Length  of  bill  : 

Java  :  62,  69.      Bali  :  61.      Kangean  :  67.      Lombok 
61,  67.5.     Flores  :  62,  62.5,  64.     Lomblen  :  61,  64.5.     Alor  : 
62.5.     Wetar  :  59-65.5   (5  examples).     Timor:  57.5,  58.5. 
Savu  :  57.5.     Siimba  58. 

Average  of  21  examples  :  62.2. 

Height  of  bill  :  minimum  20.1,  maximum  24.     Average 
of  21  examples  :  22.3. 

Distribution  :  Chain  of  islands  from  Java  to  Timor. 
Sumatra^  ?  Borneo-  ? 


Summarising  the  measurements  given  by  Stresemann 
we  have  : — 


Wing  length  : — 

undamanensis 

min, 

.  279  ; 

max. 

343  ; 

average 

313  mm, 

macrorhynchus 

» 

314  ; 

i> 

365; 

„ 

336.4  „ 

Bill  from  gape  : — 

undamanensis 

>» 

54     ; 

» 

62.5; 

>» 

58.9    „ 

macrorhynchus 

>i 

57.5  ; 

i> 

69     ; 

»» 

62.2    „ 

Bill  height  :— 

andamanensis 

>• 

20.5  ; 

» 

24.1; 

» 

22.2    „ 

macrorhynchus 

»j 

20.1  ; 

„ 

24     ; 

>i 

22.3    „ 

The  subspecies  macrorhynchus  is  shown  to  have  both 
a  longer  wing  and  a  longer  bill  than  andamanensis.  The 
heights  of  the  bills  provide  no  differential  dimensions  ;  but 
as  regards  shape  Dr.  Stresemann  states  that  the  culmen  of 
andamanensis  has  its  highest  point  above  the  nostril  [i.e., 
the  profile  is  arched  proximallyj :  that  of  macrorhynchus 
is  no  higher  above  tlie  nostril  than  at  the  base  [i.e.,  the 
profile  is  straight  proximallyj. 

Dr.  Stresemann  goes  on  to  say  (pp.  295-6)  : — "  It  is 
very  surprising  to  find  that  there  is  a  broad  space  between 
the  two  areas  of  distribution  of  the  closely  allied  forms 
andamanensis  and  macrorhynchus  :  this  is— strangely 
enough — occupied  by  a  crow  of  another  species,  Corvus 
cnca  rompilator  !  In  all  parts  of  the  latter's  range,  the 
southern  half  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra,  Nias, 
Simalur.  Borneo — so  far  as  reliable  reports  go  '  there  is  no 
representative  of  the  coronoides  species  as  we  should 
expect ;  at  least  in  the  southern  half  of  the  Malay  Peninsula 
and  in  Sumatra  which  are  parts  of  the  old  land  bridge 
from    India    to    Java.      This    is    a    case    of    allied,    but 

'  Cf.  Stone,  Proc.  Acad.  Nat.  Sci.  Philadelphia,  1902,  p.  690  : 
perhaps  an  error  for  Corvus  enca  compilator  !     E.  S. 

'  Fide  Finsch,  Notes  Leyden  Mus.  XXII,  p.  245.     E.  S. 

'  Finsch  indeed  records  Corvus  macrorhynchus  from  Borneo, 
but  probably  means  compilator.    E.  S. 


226  Journal  of  the  F.M.S    Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

heterogeneous  species  excluding  eiich  other  geographically. 
In  spite  of  the  broad  zone  of  separation  andamanensis  and 
macrorhynchus  liave  remained  very  similar — so  similar 
that  the  majority  of  modern  ornithologists  declare  them 
to  be  identical." 

Dr.  Stresemann  could  be  accused  of  manipulating 
literature  to  fit  a  theory.  In  stating  that  no  examples  of 
covonoides  seem  aviiilable  from  the  northern  part  of  the 
Malay  Peninsula  he  ignores  our  record  of  specimens  from 
Trang,  etc.,  where  it  was  very  abundant.  In  stating  that 
it  does  not  occur  in  the  southern  half  of  the  Peninsula  he 
ignores  our  next  remark.  "  In  the  southern  half  of  the 
Peninsula  it  is  scarcer  being  only  seen  in  numbers  on  the 
coast  in  the  vicinity  of  fishing  villages."  This  last  does 
away  with  his  "  broken  land  bridge  "  theory  ! 

And  when  he  wrote  "  From  Perak  to  Johor  the  Slender- 
billed  Crow,  Corvus  enca  occurs,  but  is  rare,  etc."  and 
suggests  (as  I  understand),  that  we  have  transferred  the 
names  of  two  species  he  stultifies  himself — for  if  he  believes 
that  our  enca  of  the  Southern  Malay  Peninsula  is  coronoides 
he  himself  builds  a  bridge  which  he  later  demolishes. 

There  is  no  break  in  distribution — as  far  as  the  Penin- 
sula is  concerned. 

Why  is  our  opinion  astonishing  that  (lorvus  enca  is  rare 
in  the  Malay  States  ?  It  is  based  on  the  experience  of  good 
many  years  :  rather  there  is  ground  for  astonishment  that 
in  probably  little  more  than  as  many  days  in  the  counti*y 
Dr.  Stresemann  found  it,  by  inference,  common. 

As  to  Borneo  and  Sumatra  Dr.  Stresemann  makes  the 
same  suggestion  regarding  the  birds  determined  by  Finsch 
and  Stone  as  he  does  about  our  identification.  Personally 
1  have  only  seen  examples  of  C.  enca  from  these  two  islands, 
but  it  seems  to  me  that,  for  the  present,  negative  evidence 
is  little  better  than  no  evidence. 

I'he  conclusion  arrived  at  by  Dr.  Stresemann's  methods 
is  that  only  one  form  of  C.  coronoides,  viz.,  andamanensis, 
occurs  in  the  Malay  Peninsula,  and  that  the  species  (apart 
from  its  occurrence  at  Penang),  may  extend  from  Burma 
to  the  northern  part  of  the  Peninsula  only.  Also  that 
Corvus  enca  compilator  is  the  common  form. 

I  will  now  proceed  to  give  some  account  of  the 
Malaysian  specimens  of  Crows  at  present  in  the  F.M.S. 
Museimis  and,  as  no  instructions  have  ever  been  given  to 
our  collectors  to  discriminate  betN\  een  the  two  species  when 
procuring  examples,  it  may  be  taken  that  the  numbers 
secured  fairly  represent  the  rarity  or  commonness  of  the 
two  birds.  They  show  that  as  far  as  our  experience  goes 
we  can  repeat  our  former  statement  that  coronoides  is  the 
commoner  bn-d  and  in  some  form  occurs  tliroughout  the 
Malay  Peninsula. 


1921] 


BoDEN  Kloss  :  Notes  on  Birds. 


227 


Malay  Peninsula : 

Indo-Chintse  Specimens  : — 
Rrabiiri,  Pakchan  Estuary 


Ghirbi 

Koh  Samui,  Bandon 
Trang 

Telibon  Id.,  Trang 
Malayan  Spedmens : — 
Terutau  Id. 
J.angkavvi  Id. 

Temangoh,  Upper  Perak 

Taiping,  Perak 


Bukit  Gantang,  Perak 
Trengganu 

Pulau  Jarak,  Straits  of  Malacca. 
Kuala  Selangor 


Batu,  Selangor 

Java  .— 

Huitenzorg 


Wing. 


340 
308 


Bill 
from 
gape. 


Bill 
height. 


Sex. 


326 

67 

24 

c? 

325 

66 

23 

<? 

313 

64 

22 

9 

302 

63 

21 

? 

320 

64 

21 

? 

352 

64 

245 

(7 

310 

59-5 

22 

V 

333 

67 

25 

c? 

340 

63 

24.3 

s 

340 

67 

245 

s 

307 

63 

23-5 

(J  vi.xad. 

324 

63 

235 

? 

3«2 

64 

24 

9 

344 

66 

22 

S 

325 

60 

21 

c? 

350 

66 

24 

305 

60 

22.5 



306 

61.5 

22.5 

<? 

321 

63 

,    ^-^ 

i  <? 

327 

58 

'    23 

i  <? 

340 

59 

23 

9 

285 

59 

22 

9  subad  ? 

292 

60 

22 

?  do 

313 

60 

22 

? 

311 

64 

22.5 

(j 

328 

f'5-5 

^4-5 

9 

63 

57 

58 


23 

235 
23 


Twenty-six  examples  of  coroiwides  against  six  of  enca 
(vide  postea)  from  the  same  area  ! 

The  birds  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  have  both  the  larger 
wing  and  longer  bill  ranges  of  macrorhynchus  and  must, 
I  think,  be  placed  under  that  name,  for  as  regards  the  forms 
of  the  bill  the  ditferences  stated  by  Dr.  Stresemann  do  not 
seem  to  hold  :  I  find  both  shapes  in  the  Malayan  series 
and  of  the  three  Javan  birds  one  has  the  bill  higher  at  the 
nostrils  than  at  the  base,  while  in  the  other  two,  the  height 
at  both  places  is  the  same. 

My  conclusions  are  therefore  that  a  form  of  the  species 
(^.oruHs  coronoides  occurs  throughout  the  whole  of  the 
Malay  Peninsula  where  it  is  much  commoner  than  the 
species  Corvns  enca  ;  and  that  south  of  Tenasserim  (say 
Lat.  11°  N.)  it  is  Corvus  coronoides  macrorhynchus  Wagl. 


CORVUS    ENCA. 


Six  specimens  have  been  obtained  during  the  same 
period  and  in  the  same  area  as  the  26  examples  of 
C.  coronoides  recorded  above  :  the  apparant  occurrence  is 
therefore,  only  one  to  foui\     The  detail?  are  : — 


228 


Journal  of  the  F.M.S.   Museums.       [Vol.  X, 


Wing.     Bill    from        Bill    height. 


Malay  Peninsula  : 

gape. 

Taiping,   Perak 

316 

65 

22.3 

yf 

310 

62.5 

20 

99 

303 

60 

20 

9> 

304 

61.5 

20     vix.    ad. 

Beiitong,  Pahang 

324 

62 

22.7 

I'll!  Langat,  Selangor 

307 

61.5 

22.5 

Specimens    from 

Borneo    and 

Sumatra 

(the    latter 

submitted  by  Mr.  E.  Jacobson),  measure  :— 

Locality. 

Wing. 

Bill    from 

Bill    height. 

I?orneo  : 

gape. 

Balangian,    Sarawak 

315 

61 

22 

Samarahan        „ 

308 

61 

23 

Sumatra  : 

l^ftdang  Highlands 

320 

61 

21.5 

f9 

300 

61 

22 

fj 

298 

63.5 

22 

ff 

317 

65 

21.5 

y> 

322 

64.5 

23 

ff 

305 

60.5 

21.5 

ff 

309 

61.5 

22 

f9 

314 

63.5 

20.5 

99 

305 

60 

21.5 

All  these  are  alike  and  must  all  be  known  as  Corvns 
enca  compilator  Richmond  (Proc.  U.  S.  Nat.  Mus.  XXVI, 
15)03,  p.  518.     Type  locality  :  Simalur  Id.,  W.  Sumatra). 

Corvus  enca  enca  (Horsf.)  of  Java  is  smaller  and  the 
bill  is  in  some  respects  more  like  that  of  C  c. 
niacrorhijnchus  than  its  own  subspecies  compilator  : 
viewed  laterally  it  is  less  wedge-shaped,  i.e.  the  profile  does 
not  begin  to  taper  so  quickly. 

1920 


] 

meas 

Four 
lire  ;- 

adult 

specimens 

obtained    by 

me    in 

Wing. 

Bill    from 

Bill   height 

Java 

282 
280 
273 
272 

gape. 

55 
54 
54 
56 

19 
19 
16.5 
17 

1921]  229 

XII.     SEVEN  NEW  MALAYSIAN  MAMMALS. 

By  C.  Boden  Kloss,  f.z.s. 

1.     Balionycteris  maculata  seimundi  subsp.  nov. 

Like  B.  m.  maculata  (Thos.)  of  Borneo  but  witli  the 
poslorbital  processes  much  less  developed  ;  short  and  obtuse 
instead  of  pointed  and  elongated.^ 

Male.  Head  and  nape  black,  shoulders  and  mid-back 
mummy  brown,  rump  and  sides  cinnamon  bi"o\cn  Under- 
parts  hair  brown,  the  fur  of  the  abdomen  lipped  with 
drabby  white,  of  the  fore-neck  very  indistinctly  with  drab. 
Ears  and  menbranes  black  ;  a  small  tawny  spot  on  the 
anterior  margin  of  the  ear  near  the  base,  another  near  the 
inner  angle  of  the  eye  and  a  pale  streak  near  the  angle  of 
the  mouth  :  finger  joints  tawny  and  a  f(nv  small  tawny 
spots  scattered  irregularly  over  the  wing  membranes.  The 
imdersurfacc  of  the  fore  limbs  and  the  membranes  near  Ihe 
body  distinctly  clad  with  whitish  hair. 

Female.  Only  ditfers  from  the  male  in  jjaving  no 
drab  on  the  fore-neck  and  less  cinnamon  brown  on  the 
rump. 

Co-types.  Adult  male  and  female  (skins  and  skulls) 
from  the  junction  of  the  Tahan  and  Teku  Rivers  at 
the  foot  of  Gunong  Tahan,  Pahang,  collected  by  Mr.  E. 
Seimund  on  26  Februarv  1921,  F.M.S.  Mus.,  No.  1/21  and 
2/21. 

Specimens  examined.  The  co-types,  and  three 
alcoholic  specimens,  viz.,  a  female  with  a  young  one  and 
a  gravid  female  :  all  of  which  formed  a  small  bimch  in  the 
forest. 

Collectors  e.vlernal  measurements  of  nude  and 
female  :  head  and  body,  57,  57  ;  forearm,  43,  42  ;  hindfoot, 
9,  9  ;  ear,  9,  9  mm. 

Skull  measurements  :  greatest  length,  22 -5,  22-4  ; 
condylo-basal  length,  21  •  1,  21  •  1  ;  palatal  length,  11  •  0,  11  •  2  ; 
maxillary  tooth  row  including  canine  (alveoli)  7-0,  7-0  ; 
interorbital  breadth,  5-2,  4-8  ;  breadth  across  postorbital 
processes,  7-3,  ()-5  ;  breadth  of  braincase,  10  2,  lO-O  ; 
zygomatic  breadth,  15-6,  15-1  mm. 

Remarks.  Until  last  year  the  two  Cynoplrrine  genera 
Balionycteris  and  Dyacopterus  were  only  known  from 
Borneo  where  each  is  represented  by  a  single  species, 
B.  maculata  (Thos.)  and  D.  spadiceus  (Thos.).  In  Ann. 
and  Mag.  Nat.  Hist.  (9)  \,  1920,  p  284,  Mr.  Thomas 
described  a  race  of  the  latter,  brooksi,  from  specimens 
collected  near  Bencoolen,  Sumatra,  by  Mr.  C.  J.  Brooks 
and  now  we  have  discovered  the  former  in  the  Malay 
Peninsula.  We  may  reasonably'  expect  to  meet  someday 
with  Dyacopterus  in  the  Peninsula  and  Balionycteris  in 
Sumatra. 

'  Cf.    Andersen,  Gat.  Chir.  Bfit.  Mus.  I,  1912,  p.  655,  fig.  55. 


230  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

2.  Petaurista  punctata  sumatrana  subsp.  nov.  (PI.  Ill) . 

Like  P.  p.  punctata  of  the  Malay  Peninsula  but  much 
less  flecked  with  white  :  the  spots  being  almost  absent  on 
head,  neck,  shoulders,  rump,  thighs  and  basal  part  of  tail. 

Skull  generally  similar  but  rostrum  broader  and 
shorter  :  zj'^gomata  noticablj'  broader  and  more  bowed 
outward  anteriorly  ;  but  interpterygoid  space  and  basi- 
occipital  narrower  :  loothrows  not  converging  anteriorly. 

Type.  Adult  female,  skin  and  skull,  from  the  Padang 
Highlands,  West  Sumatra  (probably  near  Fort  de  Kock). 
Obtained  by  E.  Jacobson  on  29  Mav  1918.  Original  number 
E.  J.  398. 

External  measurements  taken  in  the  flesh  :  head  and 
body  345  ;  tail  375  ;  hindfoot  65  ;  ear  29  mm. 

SIxull  measurements  :  greatest  length,  62-3  (63-0)^  ; 
basilar  length,  51-0  (50-5)  ;  diastema,  13-2  (13-2)  ;  upper 
tooth  row,  13-9  (11-0)  ;  interpterygoid  breadth,  51  (0-2)  ; 
breadth  between  bullae,  9-0  (11-0)  ;  anterior  and  posterior 
breadths  of  combined  nasals,  11-4,  7*7  (10*5,  6-9)  ;  median 
length  of  nasals,  17-0  (19-0)  ;  zygomatic  breadth,  42-0 
(42-0)  ;  mastoid  breadth,  32-5  (33-0). 

Remarks.  This  is  the  first  time  this  interesting 
squirrel  has  been  taken  in  Sumatra.  P.  punctata  seems  to 
be  a  rare  animal  everywhere.  Other  forms  have  been 
described  from  S.  Yunnan  {marica  Thos.)  and  the  Chin 
Hills  {sybilla  Thos.).     Apparantly  a  mountain  species. 

3.  Sciurus  notatus  tamansari  subsp.  nov. 

Like  the  animal  inhabiting  the  lowlands  of  East  Java^ 
but  darker  and  more  richly  coloured  throughout. 

Head,  body  and  limbs  above  less  grey,  more  olivaceous, 
the  pale  parts  of  the  grizzle  being  ochraceous.  Fore  and 
hind  feet  darker  grey,  contrasting  more  strongly  with  the 
limbs.  Ears  and  sides  of  head  and  neck  ochraceous. 
Underparts  darker,  nearly  ochraceous-orange.  Tail  more 
richly  coloured  both  above  and  below,  the  lower  median 
line  like  the  under-body. 

Type.  Adult  female  (skin  and  skull)  from  Tamansari, 
Idjen  Massif,  1,600  ft.,  about  15  miles  westwards  from 
Hanjoewangi,  East  Java.  Collected  on  18  January  1920 
by  C.  Boden  Kloss.  Original  No.  8,634  :  F.M.S.  Mus.  No. 
34/20. 

External  measurements  taken  in  the  flesh  :  head  and 
body,  200  ;  tail,  185  ;  hindfoot  s.u.,  45  ;  ear,  18  mm. 

'Measurements  in  parentheses  those  of  an  adult  male  from 
the  Larut  Hills  near  Taiping,  Perak,  2,100  ft.,  F.M.S.  Mus.  No. 
1427/11. 

"To  some  extent  this  resembles,  as  might  be  expected,  S.  n. 
madurae  Thos.  (Ann.  &  Mag.  Nat.  Hist.  (8),  V,  1910,  p.  386; 
Madura  Id.). 


1921]  BODEN  Kloss  :  New  Mammals.  231 

Skull  measurements  :  greatest  length,  50-0  ;  condylo- 
basilar  length,  43-5;  palatilar  length,  21-5;  diastema, 
12-0;  upper  molar  row  (alveoli)  11-2;  median  nasal 
length,  13-0  ;  interorbital  breadth.  15-5  ;  zygomatic 
breadth,  29  0  mm. 

Specimens  examined.  Five  from  the  type-locality 
compared  with  eight  from  Badjoelmati  in  the  lowlands 
of  Besoeki,  E.  Java. 

Remarks.  This  form  possibly  closely  resembles  S.  n. 
stresemanni  Thos.  of  Bah  (Ann.  &  Mag.  (8)  XI,  1913,  p. 
503)  ;  but  it  has  very  conspicuous  orbital  rings  and  the  head 
is  apparantly  less  ochraceous. 

All  recent  writers  on  Sciurus  notatus  —Thomas, 
Bonhote,  Robinson  and  Wroughton — have  treated  the  old 
names  which  have  been  given  the  species  as  synonyms  of 
S.  n.  notatus  ;  and  to  put  matters  on  a  clear  footing  I  select 
Western  Java  as  the  typical  locality  of  hadjing,  Kerr  (1792) 
and  biliniatus  Desni.  (1817)  :  we  know  that  nohdus  Bodd. 
(1785),  plantani  Ljung  (1801)  and  andrewsi  Boidi.  (1901) 
came  thence.  And  though  dschinschinus  Gm.  (1788)  and 
gingianus  Shaw  (1801)  are  bjsed  on  the  "  Ecuriel  de  Gingi  " 
of  Sonnerat,  supposed  to  have  come  from  Pondicherry, 
I  have  little  doubt  but  that  they  also  are  notatus  squirrels. 
If  so — typical  locality  West  Java. 

Therefore,  of  this  squirrel,  we  haNC  in  Java  at 
present  : — 

S.  n.  notatus  (with  synonomy  as  above)       West  Java. 

S.  n.  balstoni  Mid  Java. 

S.  n.  tamansari  Idjen  Massif,  East.  Java. 

All  the  notatus  squirrels  I  have  yet  seen  fiom  West 
Java  are  grey-bellied  animals,  though  the  axillae  and  in- 
guinal region  are  generally  butty  or  tawny  :  all  the  East 
Javan  specimens  1  have  examined  are  entirely  butf  or 
tawny  beneath.  S.  n.  balstoni  from  South  Mid-Java  is 
described  as  "  below  pinkish-butt",  but  as  the  hairs  have 
long  black  bases  this  colouring  is  much  disguised  except 
on  the  inner  sides  of  the  limbs  where  the  hairs  nrc  entirely 
butt' "  (Robinson  and  Wroughton,  Journ.  Fed.  Malay  States 
Mus.,  IV,  1911,  p.  234.     Tjihtjap). 

5.     Sciurus  nigrovittatus  besuki  subsp.  nov. 

Like  -S.  n.  nigrovittatus  Horsf.  of  West  Java'  but  with 
the  underparts  a  less  clear  grey,  the  tips  of  the  hairs  less 
white  being  often  considerably  sullied  with  butt'.  Muzzle, 
sides  of  head  and  neck  and  the  chin  dull  ochraceous, 
distinctly  less  intense  and  bright. 

Type.  Male,  vix  ad.  (skin  and  skull)  from  1  amansari, 
Idjen  Massif,  1,600  ft.,  East  Java.  Collected  on  17  January 
1920  by  C.  Boden  Kloss.  Original  No.  8,629,  F.M.S.  Mus. 
No.  29/20. 

'  I  select  West  Java  as  the  typical  locality  for  5.  nigrovittatus 
Horsf.,  and  also  for  S.  griseiventer  Desm. 


232  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

External  measurements  taken  in  the  flesh  :  head  and 
body,  182  (185)  >  ;  tail,  160  (160)  ;  hind  foot,  41  (43)  ;  ear, 
1(>  (16). 

Skull  measurements:  greatest  length,  16*3  (50)  ; 
condylo-basilar  length,  39-4  (43)  ;  palatilai-  length,  19  (21  ) ; 
diastema,  10-5  (12*8)  ;  upper  molar  row,  alveoli,  9  (9)  ; 
median  nasal  length,  12-4  (14-5)  ;  interorbital  breadth, 
17-2  (17-6)  ;  zygomatic  breadth,  28  (29). 

Specimens  examined.  Twelve  from  the  type  locality 
and  twenty-two  from  Sodong  Jerok,  4,000  ft.,  and  Ongop 
Ongop,  5,700  ft.,  Idjen  Massif,  East  Java,  compared  with 
many  examples  of  the  typical  form  from  Mid-Java 
(Karangbolang,  East  of  Schildpadden  Baai)  and  West  Java 
(Mt.  Gedeh,'  4,000-8,000  ft.  ;  Wynkoops  Baai  and 
Pandeglang). 

Remarks.  Tlie  West  Javan  form  of  S.  notatus-  bears 
some  resemblance  to  this  race  in  having  the  ventral  surface 
largely  grey,  sometimes  washed  with  bufl'y,  and  the  colour 
of  the  imderparts  is  therefore  no  distinction,  broadly 
speaking,  between  the  two  species  wiiich  are  differentiated 
as  follows  : — 

S.  notatus.  S.  nigrovittatus. 

Pale  edges  to  eyeliis  distinct.  No  distinct  pale  edges  to  eyelids. 

Fore  and  hind  feet  %re\  marked-  Fore    and     hind     feet    scarcely 

Iv  contrastinij  with  limbs  and  diirering  from  limhs  and  back. 

back. 

Tail      generally      linged      with  Tail    generally    markedly   l)lack 

rufous  at  tip.  at  tip. 

Pale  lateral  stripes  well  defined.  Pale  lateral  striper*  less  defined. 

Dark  lateral  stripe  less  distinct  Dark       lateral       stripe       black, 

and   coloured   like   sides    and  distinct. 

back. 

Skull  narrower.  Skull  broader. 

The  distribution  of  S.  notatus  and  nigrovittatus  in  Java, 
as  experienced  by  members  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums  during 
two  collecting  visits,  may  be  of  interest. 

East  Java  : — 

At  Badjoelmati,  in  the  lowlands  of  Besoeki,  only  notatus 
was  met  with. 

At  Tamansari,  Idjen  Massif,  1,600  ft.,  both  notatus  and 
nigrovittatus  were  found. 

At  Sodong  Jerok,  4,000  ft.,  and  Ongop  Ongop,  5,700  ft., 
on  the  Idjen,  only  nigrovittatus  was  found. 

Mid  Java  : — 

At  Karangbolong  on  the  south  coast  only  nigrovittatus 
was  met  with. 


'  Measurements  in  parentheses  those  of  an  old  female  from  the 
type  locality  :  Original  No.  8,639,  F.M.S.  Mus.  No.  39/20. 

'Well  described  bv  Bonhote  under  the  name  of  Sciiirus 
andrewsi  in  Ann.  &  Mag.  Nat.  Hist.  (7),  VII,  1901,  p.  456  :  his  type 
being  from  Tjigombong,  south  of  Buitenzorg, 


1921]  BoDEN  Ki^oas  :  New  Mammals.  233 

West  Java  : — 

At  Tjibodas,  4,000  ft.,  and  Kandang  Badak,  8,000  ft., 
Mt.  Gedeh,  only  nigrovittatiis  was  obtained. 

At  Wynkoops  Baai  were  collected  both  nofatiis  (one 
example)  and  nigrovittatiis  (many  specimens) . 

In  the  district  of  Pandeglang,  Bantam,  both  species  were 
equally  common. 

6.  Lariscus  niobe  vulcanus  subsp.  nov. 

Differs  from  L.  n.  javamis^  in  having  the  hairs  of  the 
tail  tipped  with  buff  or  tawny  instead  of  white. 

Type.  Adult  male  (skin  and  skull)  from  Ongop 
Ongop,  Idjen  Massif,  5,700  ft.,  Besoeki,  East  Java.  Obtained 
on  9  April  1916  by  F.M.S.  Museum  collector.  No.  F.M.S. 
356/16. 

External  measurements  taken  in  the  flesh  :  head  and 
body,  185  ;  tail,  115  ;  hind  foot,  46  mm. 

Skull  measurements  :  greatest  length,  48-5  condylo- 
basilar  length,  40  0  ;  palatilar  length,  20-0  ;  diastema,  12-0  ; 
upper  molar  row  (alveoli)  9-0  ;  median  nasal  length,  14-5  ; 
interorbilal  breadth,  12-0  ;  zygomatic  breadth,  27-0  mm. 

Specimens  examined.  Twelve  from  the  Idjen  Massif 
between  4-6,(K)0  ft.,  compared  with  eight  exami)les  of  L.  j. 
javanus. 

Seven  of  the  latter  come  from  West  Java  (Wynkoops 
Baai  and  Pandeglang)  ;  but  one  is  from  Tamansari,  Idjen 
Massif,  1,600  ft.  :  it  is  therefore  probable  that  L.  j.  javanus 
is  the  lowland  and  sub-montane  form  throughout  the  whole 
of  Java. 

7.  Rattus  bukit  temmincki  subsp.  nov. 

A  very  dark  form  of  Rattus  bukit  (Bonh.). 
Considerably  duller  than  R.  b.  bukit  of  the  Malay  Peninsula: 
much  duller  and  darker  than  R.  b.  treiibi^  of  the  mountains 
of  Java. 

Above  mingled  mummy-brown  and  ochraceous-tawny 
the  latter  strongest  on  the  sides  of  the  head  and  neck  and 
flanks  :  limbs  greyer  :  fore  and  hind  feet  white  with  dark 
mesial  stripes.  Dorsal  spines  greenish  grey  basally. 
Below  creamy  sharply  margined  and  extending  to  the  fore 
feet,  but  not  to  the  ankles.  Tail  bicoloured  with  a  white 
tip. 

Type.  Adult  female  (skin  and  skull)  from  Badjoel- 
mati,  north  of  Banjoewangi,  Besoeki,  East  Java,  Collected 
on  29  January  1920  by  C.  Boden  Kloss.  Original  No.  8,676, 
F.M.S.  Mus.  No.  76/20.     Mammae  2—2-8. 

^Thos.  &  Wr.  Abstr.,  P.Z.S.  1909,  p.  19;  P.Z.S.  1909,  p.  389 
(Buitenzorg,  855  ft.,  West  Java). 

^Robinson  and  Kloss,  Ann.  &  Mag.  Nat  Hist.  (9)  IV,  1919,  p.  376 
(Tjibodas,  Mt.  Gedeh,  West  Java,  5,000  ft.). 


234  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

External  measurements  taken  in  the  flesh  :  head  and 
body,  140  ;  tail,  178  ;  hindfoot,  s.u.,  3()-5  ;  ear,  21  mm. 

Skull  measurements  :  greatest  length,  35-0  ,  condyle- 
basilar  length,  28-8;  diastema,  8-4;  upper  molar  row 
(alveoli)  G-0  ;  length  palatal  foramina.  5-6  ;  median  nasal 
length,  12-9;  breadth  combined  nasals,  40;  zygomatic 
breadth,  16*0  mm. 

[The  largest  specimen,  a  male  from  Karangbolang 
measures  :  head  and  body,  147  ;  tail,  190  ;  hindfoot,  28-5  ; 
ear,  20.  Skull  :  greatest  length  36-0  ;  zygomatic  breadth; 
17-5  mm.]. 

Specimens  examined.  The  type,  two  from  Tamansari, 
Idjen  Massif,  1,600  ft.,  Besoeki  ;  and  two  from  Karang- 
bolang, east  of  Schildpadden  Baai,  Mid  Java.  Compared 
with  many  paratypes  from  Tjibodas  and  a  large  series  from 
Sodong  Jerok,  4,000  ft.,  and  Ongop  Ongop,  6,000  ft.,  Idjen 
Massif,  East  Java. 

Remarks.  This  seems  to  be  the  lowland  and 
submontane  form  throughout  Java  while  R.  b.  treuhi  is 
found  on  the  mountains  at  higher  altitudes. 

The  pelage  is  much  less  profuse  and  is  stifTer  than  in 
the  mountain  representative  ;  but  1  do  not  regard  this  as 
a  racial  character  for  if  individuals  of  the  mountain  form 
were  transferred  to  the  plains  they,  or  their  first  offspring, 
would  probably  at  once  assume  the  more  spin>,  less  furry 
coat  of  the  lowland  animal. 


1921]  235 

XIII.     NOTES  ON  SOME  MAMMALS  FROM  SUMATRA. 

By  E.  Jacobson. 
(Plate  III). 

In  the  Journal  of  the  Federated  Malay  States  Museums, 
Vol.  VII,  Decemher  1919,  Messrs.  H.  C.  Robinson  and  C. 
Boden  Kloss  published  some  papers  on  mammals  obtained 
by  me  in  difiercnt  parts  of  Sumatra  (pp.  257-291,  299-323). 
Below  I  give  some  additional  data  regarding  these 
collections.  Some  hares  I  obtained  at  a  later  date  have 
also  been  described  by  Mr.  Boden  Kloss  and  myself  (tom. 
cit.  pp.  293-298). 

1.     Nesolagus  netscheri   (Schleg.). 

Of  the  extremely  rare  Sumatran  Hare  J  obtained 
altogether  seven  specimens.  Besides  the  four  specimens 
enumerated  by  Mr,  Boden  Kloss  on  page  296,  I  caught  : — 

One  specimen  at  Balun,  in  the  District  of  Muaro  Labuh 
(Padang  Highlands),  July  1914. 

Two  specimens  at  Sungai  Kumbang,  at  the  foot  of 
Korinchi  Peak,  August  1915. 

These  three  specimens  were  sent  to  the  Leyden  Museum 
of  Natural  History,  Of  the  four  specimens  examined  by 
Mr.  Kloss  three  have  been  sent  also  to  the  Leyden  Museum 
and  one  has  been  presented  by  me  to  the  British  Museum. 

Where  such  a  rare  species  is  concerned,  it  is  worth 
while  to  record  all  specimens  which  have  been  obtained. 

In  August  1895  a  living  specimen  was  bought  by  the 
Zoological  Gardens  at  Amsterdam  from  a  sailor,  who  had 
obtained  it  at  Padang  (West  coast  of  Sumatra),  the  exact 
locality  where  it  came  from  being  imknowji.  The  animal 
was  in  very  bad  condition  and  had  lost  one  of  its  hind-legs. 
At  the  Zoological  (lardens  it  was  fed  with  bran,  radishes, 
carrots,  bread,  young  shoots  of  oak,  elm,  and  beech.  Very 
soon  after  its  arrival,  in  September  of  the  same  year,  it 
died  liaving  remained  always  very  shy  and  timorous.  The 
skin  and  skull  are  preserved  in  the  Museum  of  t!ie  Gardens. 

The  Leyden  Museum  received  in  August  1916  a  skin 
and  a  skull  of  Nesolagus  netscheri  from  Mr.  Stolz  at  Surian 
(District  Alahan  Pandjang,  Padang  Highlands),  a  place 
not  so  very  distant  from  Balun,  where  I  obtained  my  tirst 
specimen. 

The  Zoological  Museimi  at  Utrecht  possesses  two 
specimens  of  the  Sumatran  Hare  preserved  in  spirits. 

"  Another  specimen  of  N.  netscheri,  is  in  the  possession 
of  the  British  Museum  (Natural  History)  ;  and  I  am 
informed  by  Mr,  Oldfield  Thomas  that  Dr.  Forsyth-Major 
made  use  of  it  when  writing  his  well-known  paper  on 
Leporidae.  The  example  is  said  to  have  come  from  Padang, 
but  this  is  most  certainly  not  correct  and  probably  due  to 


236  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

the  careless  manner  in  which  the  collecting  locality  is  often 
indicated  by  laymen.  The  specimen  cannot  have  come 
from  Padang  or  its  direct  surroundings  for  the  same  reason 
(pointed  out  by  me  in  the  Journ.  F.M.S.  Mus.  VII,  p.  293) 
that  the  type  specimen  cannot  have  been  caught  at  Padang 
Pandjang.  I  presume  that  it  was  obtained  on  same  coffee 
estate  in  the  Barisan  Mountains  and  from  there  sent  to 
Padang." 

This  brings  the  number  of  specimens  in  Museums, 
as  far  as  I  have  been  able  to  ascertain,  to  a  total  of  thirteen. 

[A  reference  to  Nesolagus  netscheri  not  yet  mentioned 
is  this  Journal  is  : — 

Lepus  netscheri  Jent,  Cat.  Mus.  d'Hist.  Nat.  Pays. 
Has,  IX,  1887,  p.  239,  pi.  9,  figs.  1,  2  &  3  :  representing  the 
skull  of  the  type  in  three  aspects.     C.B.K.]. 

2.  Arcionyx  collaris  hoeveni  (Hubr.). 

In  Messrs.  Robinson  and  Kloss'  paper  the  measurcmonls 
of  the  female  specimen  (No.  E.  J.  116)  I  obtained  in  the 
forest  near  Suban  Ajam  (Bencoolen)  were  not  given.  I 
therefore  state  them  here  : 

Head  and  body,  580  ;  tail,  160  ;  hindfoot,  91  ;  ear, 
31  mm.^ 

3.  Mydaus  javanensis  (Desm.)  subsp.  javanensis  ?     (Syn. 

Mijdaus  meliceps,  Cuv.). 

In  the  list  of  Sumatran  mammals  given  by  Messrs. 
Robinson  and  Kloss  (Jouni.  F.M.S.  Mus.  VIII,  Part  II, 
1918,  pp.  73-80)  Mydaus  javanensis  has  been  left  out. 
This  animal  is  rather  common  in  Bencoolen  from  the  coast 
up  to  a  great  altitude  in  the  interior.  Mr.  Westenenk,  when 
Resident  of  Bencoolen,  shot  one  in  his  garden  at  the  town 
of  Bencoolen  (sea  level)  and  several  more  were  killed  by 
his  dogs  at  Kapahiang,  higher  up  in  the  Barisan  Mountain 
Range.  When  I  was  at  Suban  Ajam  at  the  foot  of  Mt. 
Kaba  (Bencoolen)  at  1,200  metres  (3,700  feet)  I  noticed 
the  smell  of  one  of  these  animals  in  the  forest  near  our 
camp.     The  odour  is  not  to  be  mistaken  and  is  so  powerful 

*  The  skin  of  this  specii;ien  was  unfortunately  destroyed  by 
insects  ;  the  skeleton  and  skull  are  now  in  the  Leyden  Museum 
of  Natural  History. 

From  my  collections  of  jnammals  from  Bencoolen,  Palembang, 
South-West  Sumatra,  and  the  Ophir  Districts  described  by  Messrs. 
liobinson  and  Kloss  besides  the  specimen  of  Arctonyx  collaris 
hoeveni  mentioned  above,  nine  more  skins  have  also  been  destroyed 
by  insects,  viz.  : — 

Pithecus  melalophos  melalophos,  No.  EJ.  23  ;  Felis  marmorata. 
No.  EJ.  214  ;  Felis  beiigalensis  sumatnma,  No.  EJ.  70  ;  Pagiuna 
larvata  leiicomijstax,  "  No.  EJ.  196  ;  Gijmnui  i  gymnura 
(jymmira.  No.  EJ.57  and  77  ;  Petaurista  petaurista  batuana.  No.  EJ. 
34  ;  Batiifa  bicolor  palliata,  No.  EJ.  90  and  161. 

The  remainder  of  my  collections  has  been  sent  to  the  Leyden 
Museum  of  Natural  History,  except  a  number  of  specimens 
presented  to  the  Federated  Malay  States  Museums. 


1921]         Jacobson  :   Mammals   from   Sumatra.  237 

that  it  can  be  conipared  with  nothing  else  in  Malaysia.  In 
different  parts  of  Sumatra  the  animal  is  called  tclegu. 
Curiously  enough,  it  does  not  occur  in  the  Padang 
Highlands. 

4.    Felis  tigris  sondaica  Fitzinger. 

There  has  been  some  controversy  over  the  question 
whether  the  Sumatran  species  ought  to  be  separated  from 
the  Javan  one.  It  is  therefore  interesting  to  mention  the 
opinion  of  Mr.  B.  Ledeboer,  the  well-known  tiger  hunter. 

I  translate  here  some  of  the  most  important  passages 
from  one  of  his  letters  to  me  : 

"The  different  kinds  of  tigers  distinguished  by  the 

"  Javanese,  (known  as  gemhol  and  tjantel)  because  of  the 
"  shape  of  the  stripes,  are  quite  fictitious.  The  skins  I 
"  possess  from  Java,  Bali  and  Sumatra,  more  than  one 
**  hundred,  all  show  the  same  kind  of  stripes.  The  slight 
"■  diftcrences  noticeable  being  due  to  age  or  mode  of  hfe. 
"  Tigers  living  in  lalang  fields  are  lighter  in  colour  than 
"  those  from  the  forest.  Young  tigers  are  different  from 
"  old  ones.  The  older  the  animal,  the  narrower  and  further 
"  apart  the  stripes  will  grow.  In  very  old  tigers  the  stripes 
"  on  the  front  |)art  of  the  body  disappear  altogether. 

"  The  Sumatran  tiger  is  marked  quite  differently  from 
"  the  Javan  form.  If  a  Sumatran  tiger  is  laid  on  its  back, 
"  nothing  is  seen  but  a  whitish  skin,  the  under-side  of  head, 
"  throat,  breast  and  belly  being  totally  without  markings. 
"  In  the  Javan  tiger,  however,  the  extent  of  white  on  the 
"  under-surface  is  considerably  reduced  and  encroached  on 
"  by  the  ends  of  the  stripes  from  the  sides.  An  animal  from 
"  Sumatra  may  therefore  be  distinguished  at  a  glance  from 
"  one  from  Java.  Moreover  the  stripes  in  the  Sumatran 
"  tiger  are  not  so  continuous,  being  frequently  broken  ;  they 
"  even  show  a  tendency  to  form  spots,  not  plain  ones,  but 
"  cuxles.  Full  grown  tigers  from  Java,  Bali  and  Sumatra 
"  do  not  vary  much  in  size.  The  biggest  example  I  have 
"  obtained  ran  somewhat  over  3  metres  ;  3.05  metres  is  an 
"  exception.    The  males  are  much  larger  than  the  females." 

[When  Mr.  H.  C.  Robinson  and  I  wrote  our  note  on 
Sondaic  tigers  (Journ.  F.M.S.  Mus.  VIII,  pt.  2,  1918.  p.  8) 
we  had  to  depend  on  literature  for  information  and  recorded 
a  Sumatran  specimen  as  F.  t.  sondaica  though  Schwarz 
had  selected  Java  as  the  type-locality  for  that  race.  During 
my  visit  to  Java  in  1920  I  saw  a  number  of  tiger  bkins  from 
that  island  and  from  Bali  and  am  now  of  opinion  that 
sondaica  must  be  used  for  the  Javan  animal  only,  for 
besides  having  the  narrower  white  undersurface  mentioned 
by  Heer  Ledeboer  the  stripes  are  undoubtedly  less  heavy 
than  in  the  Sumatran  animal.  The  Sumatran  and  Malayan 
material  I  have  been  able  to  compare  is  very  small  and 
I  have  not  been  able  to  see  any  difference  between  the 
animals  of  the  island  and  the  peninsula  :  both  apparantly 
are  F.  t.  tigris. 


238  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums        [Vol.  X, 

The  tii^cr  of  Bali,  P.  t.  halica  Scliwarz  (Ann.  &  Mag. 
Nat.  Hist.  (8)  X,  1912,  p.  325)  seems  to  me  to  have  still 
narrower  and  fewer  stripes  than  the  Javanese  race  (four 
Bali  specimens  examined).  Schwarz  who  only  saw  one 
skin,  says  the  markings  are  broader  and  more  duplicated  ! 
He  also  states  that  the  Bali  animal  is  recognisable  by  its 
smaller  size.  I  think  that  size  and  skull  characters  are 
very  untrustworthy  guides  for  distinguishing  Malaysian 
tigers  :  they  depend  so  much  on  age  as  we  have  shown 
(I.c.s.)  C.  Boden  Kloss]. 

5.  Fells  pardus  Linn. 

It  has  sometimes  been  doubted  whether  the  panther 
really  occurs  in  Sumatra,  but  Mr.  Boden  Klos«  drew  my 
attention  to  a  record  of  Schneider,  who  saw  a  black  panther 
at  Batu  Bahra,  and  he  himself  knows  of  a  second  animal 
fired  at,  but  missed  in  the  Besidency  of  Sumatra's  East 
Coast  some  1.5  years  ago.  I  myself  have  been  told  several 
times  of  black  panthers  having  been  shot  by  Euroi)eans, 
and  native  hunters  informed  me  repeatedly  that  a  black 
l)anther,  which  they  called  kumhanq  was  known  to  them. 
In  .lava  where  the  same  name  is  applied  to  the  melanistic 
variety  of  Felis  pardus,  it  is  much  rarer  than  the  normally 
coloured  animal.  I  know,  how^ever,  of  no  authentic  record 
of  a  Felis  pardus  of  the  normal  yellow  colour  with  black 
markings  having  been  obtained  in  Sumatra.  Over  and  over 
again  F^uropean  hunters  assured  me  that  they  had  shot  such 
an  animal,  but  on  closer  investigation  all  these  cases  turned 
out  to  refer  to  Felis  nebulosa,  the  "  rimau  dahan  "  of  the 
Malays. 

My  opinion,  that  the  normally  coloured  Felis  pardus 
does  not  live  in  Sumatra  is  still  unshaken,  and  I  am  very 
much  inclined  to  believe  that  the  black  animals  shot  or 
seen  in  this  country  are  nothing  else  than  melanistic 
examples  of  Felis  nebulosa.  I  may  mention,  that  this  is 
also  the  opinion  of  the  well-known  tiger  hunter  Mr.  B. 
Ledeboer. 

6.  Lutra  lutra  barang  Cuv. 

Lnlra    vulgaris    barang    Robinson    &    Kloss,    Journ.    F.M.S.    Mus.    VUI, 
pt.   11    (1918),  p.  13. 

1  $  (skin  and  skull)  Fort  de  Kock,  West  coast  of 
Sumatra,  920  metres  (3,()0()  ft.),  15th  June  1920,  No.  EJ. 
404,  leg.  E.  Jacobson. 

Measurements  in  the  flesh  : — 

Head  and  body,  557  ;  tail,  470  ;  hind  foot,  109  ;  ear, 
19  mm. 

Skull  :  greatest  length,  104  ;  condylo-basal  k^ngth,  106  ; 
basal  length,  98  ;  palataF  length,  47  ;  greatest  length  on 
outer  edge  of  p.m.\  10-7  ;  greatest  diameter  of  m',  10-7  ; 
interorbital  breadth,  19  ;  postorbital  breadth,  14  ;  cranial 
breadth,  48-5  ;  mastoid  breadth,  5(5  ;  zygomatic  breadth, 
60-5  mm. 


1921]         Jacobson  :   Mammals   from   Sumatra.  239 

This  specimen  is  now  in  the  F.M.S  Museum  at  Kuala 
Lumpur. 

I  Though  the  hest  character  for  determining  the  species, 
i.e.,  the  shape  of  the  upper  edge  of  the  rhinarium.  has  been 
destroyed  by  an  injury  to  the  nose  I  have  no  doubt  as  to 
my  identification,  made  at  Heer  Jacobson's  request,  of  this 
considerably  grizzled  specimen.     C.  Boden  Kloss]. 

7.     Petaurista  punctata  sumatrana  Kloss  (Plate  III) . 

This  specimen,  which  will  be  sent  to  the  Leyden 
Museum,  was  bought  from  a  native  at  Fort  de  Kock  (940 
metres),  and  nuist  have  been  captured  in  the  vicinity'  of 
this  place,  situated  in  the  Padang  Highlands  (West  coast 
of  Sumatra).  It  had  become  rather  tame  and  was  kept 
in  a  cage.  Being  of  nocturnal  habits  it  slept  mostly  during 
the  day,  sitting  hunched  up  in  one  of  the  corners  of  its 
cage,  with  its  tail  folded  over  its  back  and  the  end  of  it 
curled  around  its  iiead  in  such  a  manner,  that  the  latter 
was  entirely  concealed.  If  disturbed  during  *he  day  it 
would  wake  up  for  some  time  and  even  take  the  food  given 
to  it,  but  later  it  would  go  to  sleep  again,  becoming  lively 
in  the  evening  aftei-  the  sun  had  set.  A  favorite  position 
when  awake  was  the  one  seen  in  the  accompanying  photo- 
graph, its  tail  being  held  over  its  back  and  head. 

The  Prtanri.sUi  was  fed  witli  all  sorts  of  fruit  and 
nuts,  tile  tigs  of  ditferent  kinds  of  Ficn.s  beuig  very  much 
preferred.  1  think  1  made  a  great  mistake  by  feeding  it 
exclusively  on  vegetable  matter,  as  it  is  well-known  that 
squirrels  are  great  destroyers  of  birds  nests,  devouring  eggs 
and  yound  tledglings.  The  idea  did  not  occur  to  me  then 
to  provide  animal  food,  and  to  this  reason  I  ascribe  the 
fact  that  the  Pelaurista  after  some  time  began  to  gnaw  its 
soles.  After  it  had  devoured  a  great  part  of  the  skin  of 
its  feet,  I  decidetl  to  kill  the  animal,  fearing  the  specimen 
would  be  spoilt. 

Afterwards  I  heard  from  one  of  my  acxjuaintances, 
that  he  had  kept  a  Pclaurista  in  confinement,  which 
devoured  the  greater  part  of  one  of  its  gliding  membranes. 
The  natives  here  assert  that  the  Petaurista,  which  is  called 
in  Minangkabau  Malay  kubiu\  destroys  the  very  young 
coconuts,  not  bigger  tiian  a  hen's  egg,  but  the  specimen 
I  kept  refused  to  touch  these  young  nuts. 

Petaurista  petaurista  batuana  Miller,  seems  to  be  the 
common  species  in  the  Padang  Highlands.  When  I  once 
stopped  at  a  village  called  Andalas  at  the  foot  of  Mt.  Sago, 
tlying-squirrels  used  to  come  ;'t  dusk  in  a  volplaiie  from  the 
surrounding  hills  down  to  the  village  in  the  vallev,  covering 
in  one  stieUh  a  distance  which  must  have  been  at  least  400 


'  The  name  of  kiihin  is  equally  applied  to  the  flying  Lemur 
(idleoptenis  variegatiis  tcnimincki  (Waterh.).  [hi  Sumatra, 
perhaps,  but  in  tlie  Malay  i'eninsiila  tliis  animal  is  called  "  kubong  " 
C.B.K.j. 


240  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.   Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

or  500  yards.  They  alighted  always  on  Ihe  trunks  of 
coconut  trees,  which  being  totally  without  branches  afforded 
a  convenient  alighting  spot.  Then  they  crawVd  up  the 
trunk  till  they  came  underneath  the  base  of  the  crown  and 
pushed  off,  alighting  then  on  some  other  tree.  The  line  of 
flight  is  always  curved  ;  first  slanting  down  and  then  curving 
up  again  :  the  point  of  arrival  is,  however,  always  lower 
than  the  starting  point. 

When  in  August  1015  I  made  an  ascent  of  the  Peak  of 
Korinchi  (Sumatra),  I  found  a  PeUmrista  on  the  highest 
point  of  the  Peak,  at  the  very  brim  of  the  crater.  When 
I  approached  it  stared  at  me  with  its  large  glaring  eyes, 
making  no  attempt  to  escape. 

I  cannot  explain  what  motive  the  animal  had  to  seek 
such  an  inhospitable  spot,  which  is  3,800  metres  (12,500  ft.), 
high  and,  except  for  a  few  straggling  plants,  is  for  the  last 
400  metres  entirely  bare  of  all  vegetation.  The  animal 
could  not  possibly  have  come  to  the  mountain  top  through 
the  air,  for,  as  pointed  out  above,  it  has  to  avail  itself 
always  of  a  higher  starting  point.  Therefore  it  must  have 
crawled  up  all  the  way  from  the  nearest  .forest,  which  is 
still  considerably  below  the  limit  of  vegetation. 

This  is  not  the  only  record  of  a  Petaurista  being  found 
in  such  a  peculiai'  place.  Mr.  L.  Westenenk,  now  Resident 
of  Palembang,  told  me  that  a  Petaurista  was  formerly  seen 
at  the  edge  of  the  crater  of  Mt.  Merapi  in  the  Padang 
Higlilands.  The  surroundings  of  this  crater  are  also 
'vithout  vegetation. 


Journ.  F.M.S.  Mus— Vol.  X. 


PI.  III. 


E.  JACOBSON,  PHOTO. 

PETAURISTA   PUNCTATA  SUMATRANA. 


81 

50 

82 

63 

80 

39 

2 

24 

88 

56 

74 

43 

95 

94 

70 

d 

25 

85 

M.>(Batavia) 

4 

11)21  j  241 

XIV.     NOTES  ON  THE  PROBABLE  CLIMATE  OF  A 
MOUNTAIN  STATION  IN  THE  MALAY  STATES. 

By  C.  E.  p.  Brooks,  m.sc,  Air  Ministry. 

1.    Temperature. 

The  heat  of  tropical  regions  is  proverbial,  but  they 
are  characterised  rather  by  constant  heat  than  by  unusually 
high  temperatures.  Taking  Singapore  as  an  example,  and 
comparing  it  with  Richmond,  Surrey,  we  have  the  following 
little  table  :— 

Temperature.  Singapore.  Richmond. 

"F.  °F. 

Mean  annual 
Hottest  month 
Coldest  month 
Annual  range 
Mean  daily  maxinunn 
Mean  daily  minimum 
Highest  recorded 
Lowest  recorded 
Absolute  range 

Average  difTerence  between  mean  tem- 
I)erature  of  one  day  and  the  next  . . 

This  table  shows  us  at  once  the  characteristics  of  an 
etiuatorial  coast  station  as  comi)ared  witii  London  : 

(1)  The  mean  annual  temperature  is  about  30  degrees 
higher.  On  all  tropical  coasts  and  islands  the  mean 
temperature  at  sea  level  stays  very  close  to  80°  F.,  a  round 
number  which  is  very  convenient  to  remember. 

(2)  The  annual  variation  is  exceedingly  small,  being 
only  2°  F.  at  Singapore.  At  stations  so  close  to  the  equator 
(the  latitude  is  only  P  17'  N.)  it  is  more  oi  less  of  an 
accident  which  months  are  the  warmest.  There  is  no 
distinction  of  seasons  by  temperature  as  there  is  in  England, 
the  terms  "  winter,"  *'  spring,"  etc.,  having  n'^*  meaning. 
The  sun  is  overhead  at  the  equinoxes,  i.e.,  March  and 
September,  but  the  difference  from  other  months  is  not 
great  enough  to  be  im]K)rtant. 

(3)  The  daily  range,  or  the  difference  between  the 
temperature  of  the  day  and  that  of  the  night,  is  very  nearly 
the  same  at  Singapore  and  London,  but  even  here  there 
is  a  difference.  In  the  tropics  the  day  is  alMays  hotter  than 
the  night  by  about  the  same  amount,  and  the  alternation 
of  higher  and  lower  temperatures  every  24  hours  is  as 
regular  as  is  the  alternation  of  summer  and  winter  in 
temperate  regions.  In  fact  it  has  been  said  that  "  night 
is  the  winter  of  the  tropics."  In  England  on  the  other 
hand,  though  the  day  is  generally  warmer  than  the  night, 
it  sometimes  happens,  especiallj'^  in  winter,  that  the  tem- 
perature rises  as  night  comes  on,  so  that  the  night  is 
warmer  than  the  day.     In  the  tropics  this  never  happens. 


242  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

(4)  But  though  the  night  is  cooler  than  ti.e  day,  it  U 
still  very  hot,  as  judged  by  English  standards.  74°  F., 
which  is  the  average  temperature  of  the  coldest  part  of  the 
night  at  Singapore,  would  pass  for  a  hot  day  in  England. 

(5)  It  is  in  the  extremes  of  temperature  that  the 
difference  between  temperate  and  equatorial  regions  is 
shown  most  markedly.  Days  almost  as  hot  as  any  met 
with  in  Singapore  can  be  experienced  in  a  L.ondon  summer. 
At  Bukit  Mertajam,  near  Perak,  a  maximum  temperature 
of  101°  F.  has  been  recorded,  but  this  has  been  nearly 
equalled  in  England  (100°  F.).  On  the  other  hand,  the 
lowest  temperature  recorded  at  Singapore  is  70°  F.,  while 
at  Richmond  the  thermometer  has  been  down  to  9°  F.,  a 
difference  of  61.^ 

(6)  The  smaller  difference  from  one  day  to  the  next 
in  the  Tropics  also  makes  for  monotony. 

2.     The  Change  of  Temperature  with  Height. 

Leaving  the  sea-level-  and  climbing  the  slopes  of  a 
mountain,  the  temperature  is  found  to  fall.  This  fall  is 
on  the  average  at  the  rate  of  about  3  degrees  Fahr.  for 
every  tliousand  feet.  Thus  at  a  height  of  five  thousand  feet 
the  mean  temperature  will  have  fallen  from  the  tropical 
figure  of  80°  F.  to  the  merely  pleasantly  warm  one  of  65°  F. 
That  is  why  it  is  always  desirable  in  the  troj)ics  to  establish 
health  stations  or  sanatoria  on  high  mountains,  the  change 
to  the  lower  temperature  having  a  marked  bracing  effect  ; 
the  smaller  density  of  the  air  owing  to  thf>  decreased 
atmospheric  pressure  is  also  beneficial  at  moderate 
heights  (not  exceeding  6-7.000  ft.)  as  in  the  generally 
greater  dryness  of  the  air. 

The  diurnal  range  at  high  levels  does  not  generally 
diifer  greatly  from  the  average  at  lower  levels,  but  much 
depends  upon  local  conditions.  On  an  elevated  plateau  the 
range  is  much  greater  than  on  the  side  of  an  isolated  moun- 
tain peak,  for  two  reasons.  Firstly,  a  plateau  offers  a  wider 
surface  to  direct  heating  by  the  sun's  rays,  and  therefore 
gets  much  hotter  during  the  day  than  a  mountain  slope. 
Secondly,  on  a  level  plateau  the  air  becomes  colder  at  night 
than  on  a  mountain  slope.  Air,  especially  div  air,  does 
not  itself  lose  heat  rapidly  by  radiation,  but  the  ground 
beneath  it  does,  and  the  air  becomes  cooled  by  contact  with 
the  ground.  Consequently  air  near  the  ground  becomes 
colder  than  that  some  distance  away  from  the  ground. 
Gold  air  is  heavier  than  warmer  air,  consequently  it  will  flow 
down  a  mountain  slope  like  a  river  and  give  place  to  warmer 
air  which  has  not  been  in  contact  with  the  ground.  On  a 
plateau  it  cannot  flow  away,  but  must  remain  v.here  it  is, 
so  that  the  temperature  falls  lower. 

This  is  illustrated  by  the  contUtions  at  tw  >  mountain 
stations  in  Java.  One,  on  a  level  plateau  enclosed  by  the 
Yang  Mountains,  at  an  elevation  of  6,500  ft.,  has  a  daily 


1921]  Brooks  :  Mountain  Climates.  243 

range  of  14"  F.,  from  66°  F.  in  the  day  to  52°  F.  in  the 
night  ;  at  the  other,  at  Tosari  on  a  mountain  blope,  at  a 
height  of  5,800  ft.,  the  daily  range  is  not  more  th.-n  7°  F. 

At  Tosari  in  Java  the  lowest  temperature  occurs  just 
before  sunrise,  as  near  the  sea  coast,  but  the  temperatures 
during  the  day  at  a  height  of  about  5,800  ft.  are  very 
different.  In  the  morning  clouds  form  with  their  upper 
surface  below  the  level  of  the  station,  and  temperature 
rises  rapidly,  the  station  receiving  not  only  tliC  direct  and 
very  powerful  radiation  from  the  sun,  but  also  that  reflected 
from  the  clouds.  But  during  the  day,  as  the  heat  of  the 
plains  becomes  greater,  the  level  of  the  clouds  rises,  and 
shortly  after  ten  o'clock  they  reach  the  station,  which  then 
becomes  plunged  in  mist.  Temperature  now  faUs  rapidly, 
but  with  great  fluctuations  of  as  nuich  as  5°  F.  in  a  few 
minutes  as  the  clouds  come  and  go.  Consequently  the 
greatest  heat  of  the  day  comes  about  ten  o'ckck  in  the 
morning,  instead  of  in  the  afternoon  as  at  lower  levels.  The 
afternoons  are  cloudier  and  cooler. 

As  a  rule,  at  night  the  clouds  either  dispcse  or  sink 
to  a  lower  level,  so  that  the  nights  are  clear  and  dry,  but 
occasionally  they  will  be  cloudy  and  these  nights  will  be 
relatively  hot  and  oppressively  moist,  the  blanket  of  cloud 
preventing  the  ground  from  radiating  its  heat. 

3,  Humidity,  Sunshine  and  Cloudiness. 

The  chief  characteristic  of  the  humidity  of  tiie  air  at  a 
tropical  mountain  station  is  the  rapidity  with  which  it 
varies.  Above  the  clouds  the  air  is  very  dry,  but  among 
them  it  is  satiuated  with  moisture.  In  the  intense  solar 
radiation  of  the  morning  the  air  is  as  dry  as  thai  of  a  desert 
at  noon  ;  a  cloud  drifts  up,  and  even  though  no  rain  falls, 
everything  drips  with  moisture.  The  actual  average 
depends  upon  local  conditions,  but  will  probably  be  not 
far  from  eighty  per  cent,  of  saturation  during  the  days — a 
figure  indicating  a  quite  considerable  degree  of  moisture, 
and  much  less  during  the  nights,  which  would  thus  appear 
cooler  than  they  actually  are  relatively  to  the  plains. 

The  amount  of  bright  sunshine  will  probably  be  very 
considerable.  At  low  level  stations  the  sky  is  on  the  average 
half  covered  with  clouds,  which  means  that  on  the  average 
sunny  and  dull  days  will  occur  with  equal  frequency,  but 
at  a  level  of  5,000  ft.  much  of  the  cloud  development  will 
take  place  below  the  station,  which  will  thuG  receive  a 
greater  amount  of  sunshine,  especially  in  the  mornings. 
Moreover,  owing  to  the  greater  clearness  of  the  air,  this 
sunshine  will  be  far  more  powerful  than  on  the  plains. 
Excess  of  sunshine  and  light  is  frequently  dangerous  to 
Europeans  in  the  tropics. 

4.  Winds  :  The  Alternation  of  Monsoons. 

But  if  there  are  not  four  seasons  in  the  English  sense, 
there  is  a  very  definite  division  of  the  year  into  two  seasons 


244  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.       [Vol.  X, 

of  another  type,  known  as  the  north-east  and  south-west 
monsoons.  From  December  to  March  the  wind  blows  very 
regularly  from  the  north-east,  and  from  May  to  October 
it  blows  almost  equally  regularly  from  between  south-east 
and  south-west.  April  and  November  are  transition 
months. 

To  understand  this  change  we  must  consider  the 
geographical  position  of  Singapore.  To  the  north  lies  the 
great  continent  of  Asia,  to  the  south  the  large  island  of 
Australia.  These  are  far  enough  north  and  south  to  be 
greatly  cooled  in  winter  and  to  a  less  extent  heated  in 
summer.  Lying  in  opposite  hemispheres,  Asia  is  hot  while 
Australia  is  cold,  aiul  nice  nersa.  The  equatorial  regions 
are  always  hot.  Now  air  expands  with  heat,  and  hot  air 
is  lighter  than  cold  air,  consequently  hot  air  tends  to  rise 
while  the  cold  air  tlows  along  the  surface  of  the  earth  to 
replace  it.  In  the  months  of  November  to  March  this  cold 
air  flows  in  a  steady  stream  of  immense  volume  from  the 
high  table  lands  of  central  Asia,  where  it  is  winter,  across 
the  inter\'ening  oceans  to  the  equator  and  possibly  beyond 
it.  This  is  the  north-east  monsoon,  which  returns  every 
year  at  about  the  same  time.  In  some  parts  of  the  worjd 
it  blows  with  great  force,  but  at  Singapore  it  is  relatively 
light,  blowing  at  only  about  two  miles  an  hour  a  few  feet 
from  the  ground. 

From  May  to  October  it  is  Australia  that  is  relatively 
cold,  and  the  wind  at  Singai>ore  during  these  months  is 
away  from  this  continent,  i.e.  is  southerly,  blowing  from 
between  south-west  and  south-east  at  about  two  miles  an 
hour.  At  this  sheltered  locality  calms  are  frequent  but  in 
a  more  exposed  situation  calms  are  rarer  and  the  velocity 
of  the  wind  somewhat  greater.  Wind  generally  increases 
in  velocity  with  height,  and  on  a  mountain  slope  there  is 
probably  a  fairly  steady  breeze  which  is  a  favourable  factor 
in  the  climate.  The  alternation  of  monsoons  at  the  level 
of  5,000  ft.  is  probably  the  same  as  at  Singapore,  but  at 
greater  heights  the  wind  would  come  very  regularly  from 
east. 

5.     Rainfall. 

The  rainfall  in  the  Straits  Settlements  is  everyw^here 
hea\^,  Singapore  having  one  hundred  inches  (2,500 
millimetres)  a  year  and  Perak  as  much  as  120  inches  (3,000 
nmi.) .  Whether  the  rainfall  at  a  mountain  station  of 
5,000  ft.  height  would  be  more  or  less  than  this  depends  very 
much  on  local  conditions,  probably  it  would  be  rather  less, 
as  the  heaviest  rain  clouds  often  have  their  under  surfaces 
below  5,000  ft.  At  still  greater  heights  the  amount  falls 
oft'  rapidly.  A  total  of  one  hundred  inches  is  several  times 
as  heavy  as  that  of  London,  but  it  must  be  remembered 
that  owing  to  the  extremely  rapid  rate  at  which  rain  falls 
in  the  tropics,  the  actual  time  taken  is  ver>'  much  less.  The 
intensity   of    tropical   rainfall   is   only   rarely   attained   in 


1921]  Brooks  :   Mountain   Climates.  245 

England,  in  exceptionally  heavy  thunderstorms.  The  cause 
of  this  heavy  rainfall  is  the  great  amount  of  moisture  in 
the  air.  Saturated  air  at  80°  F.  contains  twice  as  much 
moisture  as  the  same  volume  of  saturated  air  at  60°  F.,  and 
nearly  four  times  as  much  as  at  40°  F.  It  is  by  the  elevation 
of  air  and  its  consequent  cooling  that  clouds  and  rain  are 
formed.  If  saturated  air  is  cooled  from  80°  F.  to  60°  F.  it 
will  set  free  twice  as  much  water,  that  is,  the  rain  will  be 
twice  as  heavy,  as  if  it  were  cooled  from  60°  F.  to  40°  F. 
The  number  of  days — 173 — at  Singapore  is  almost  the  same 
as  at  Richmond  (170),  and  in  Perak,  although  the  total  fall 
is  greater,  the  average  number  of  days  is  only  156.  A 
"  rain-day "  is  defined  as  a  day  on  which  a  measurable 
amount  of  rain,  generally  0  •  01  inch  or  more  falls. 

There  is  some  attempt  at  the  development  of  a  rainy 
season  in  the  Straits  Settlements,  but  it  differs  in  different 
parts.  At  Singapore  the  rainiest  months  are  November  to 
January,  and  the  least  rainy — one  can  hardly  call  them 
dry — May  to  September.  In  Perak  September  to  November 
are  the  rainiest  months,  January  and  February  the  least 
rainy.  Even  the  relatively  dry  months  however  exceed  six 
inches  (160  mm.)  in  their  rainfall,  a  total  representing  an 
unusually  wet  month  in  England. 

Some  of  the  individual  falls  are  exceedingly  heavy, 
Singapore  having  experienced  more  than  7  inches  (175 
mm.)  in  a  day  on  at  least  two  occasions,  while  Perak  has 
reached  the  total  of  13-8  inches  (346  mm.)  in  24  hours. 
But  at  a  mountain  station  we  may  expect  the  falls  to  be 
less  heavy  and  more  continuous. 

There  is  one  point  in  which  mountain  climates  in  the 
tropics  are  unfavourably  situated,  and  that  in  the  unequal 
division  of  the  rainfall  between  the  day  and  the  night,  owing 
to  the  daily  variation  in  the  level  of  the  clouds.  Tosari, 
the  health  resort  of  Java  previously  referred  to,  has  an 
annual  rainfall  during  the  day  of  about  four  times  as  much 
as  that  during  the  night,  and  this  peculiarity  is  probably 
shared  by  other  mountain  stations  in  the  tropics  of  a  similar 
height. 

6.    Storms. 

Tosari  is  very  subject  to  severe  storms  from  the  south- 
west, but  these  are  local  only,  being  due  to  the  peculiar 
nature  of  the  topography  of  East  Java,  where  a  long  funnel- 
shaped  valley  conducts  the  winds  with  accumulated  force 
straight  to  the  settlement.  An  open  isolated  peak  should 
be  much  better  situated  in  this  respect,  and  should  rarely 
experience  more  than  a  strong  breeze. 


XV.   THE  FLORA   OF  KLANG   GATES,  SELANGOR. 

By  H.  N.  Ridley,  M.A.,  C.M.G.,  F.R.S. 

The  high  ridge  of  Klang  Gates  in  Selangor  consists 
of  a  lofty  dyke  of  quartzite  running  across  the  valley  of 
the  Klang  river  which  has  cut  its  way  through  the  rock. 
The  ridge  is  about  three  miles  in  length,  and  its  highest 
point  is  1,400  feet  in  height.  In  many  places  the  top  is 
quite  narrow,  only  a  few  feet  across,  and  the  sides  are 
in  most  places  quite  precipitous.  It  is  evidently  a 
quartzite  dyke  traversing  granitic  rocks  which  have  long 
since  been  eroded  away.  I  visited  it  many  years  ago 
and  collected  there  a  portion  of  the  peculiar  flora  on  a 
part  of  the  ridge  to  the  north  above  the  bungalow,  which 
stands  high  up  above  the  road;  and  on  the  2nd  January, 
1921,  with  Mr.  C.  Roden  Kloss  and  Messrs.  Milsum  and 
South  of  the  Agricultural  Department  ascended  the 
ridge  on  the  south  side  to  Rukit  Lompat  Rayan,  1,148  feet 
altitude.  On  the  previous  day  Mr.  Kloss  and  I 
had  ascended  the  north  side  above  the  bungalow,  for 
some  way,  and  later  Mr.  Kloss  went  further  up 
towards  Rukit  Ratu  Tabur,  the  highest  point,  1,445  feet 
high.  On  the  lower  slopes  the  lowland  flora  has  ascended 
for  some  distance,  where  there  is  sufficient  soil  and 
humidity  for  its  growth,  but  on  the  bare  quartzite  ridge 
there  is  a  small  but  quite  peculiar  flora  consisting  of 
several  endemic  species  with  several  only  known  from 
much  higher  altitudes  in  our  mountains,  and  not  occurr- 
ing in  the  forest-clad  hills  of  the  main  chain.  These 
plants  are  strictly  xerophytic  and,  as  I  shall  hope  to  show 
in  a  later  paper,  are  the  remains  of  an  ancient  xerophytic 
flora  which  at  one  time  pervaded  the  whole  of  the  Malay 
Peninsula,  but  which  by  climatic  changes  has  been  driven 
out,  only  persisting  on  the  sub-xerophytic  tops  of  certain 
of  our  mountains  and  to  some  extent  on  the  seashores. 

To  reach  the  summit  of  the  ridge  on  the  south  side 
we  crossed  the  river  and  passed  through  a  portion  of  a 
rubber  plantation,  above  which  is  a  wooded  slope  con- 
sisting of  lowland  trees  and  shrubs  in  which  we  found 
the  new  and  beautiful  Didijmocarpus  primiilimis.  This 
slope  of  deep  humus  leads  to  a  break  in  the  precipitous 
quartzite  ridge  by  which  it  is  possible  to  get  on  to  the  top 
at  Rukit  Lompat  Rayan,  which  is  quite  bare  of  soil  and 
bears  the  remarkable  rock  flora.  It  is  this  flora  of  which 
I  treat  in  this  paper,  but  have  added  two  new  species 
growing  lower  down  and  towards  the  base  of  the  rock. 

Capparis  lariitensis.  King.      (Capparidaceae). 

A  single  bush  of  this  very  thorny  plant  occurred  on 
the  rocks  behind  the  bungalow.  Only  previously  known 
from  Perak. 


248  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.X, 

Elaeocarpus  MastersiU  King.     (Tiliaceae). 

A  small  bushy  tree,  the  leaves  are  rather  small  and 
more  coriaceous  than  in  the  typical  lowland  form. 
Common  in  open  country  in  the  Peninsula. 

Rhodoleia  Teysmanni,  Miq.     (Hamamelideae). 

This  beautiful  bush  with  its  heads  of  rose-pink 
flowers  is  abundant  on  the  rocks  on  both  sides  of  the 
ridge.  It  is  a  high  mountain  plant  occurring  on  the  dryer 
mountains  at  3,000  to  5,000  feet  altitude.  I  have  never 
seen  it  at  such  a  low  altitude  elsewhere. 

Pygeum  Hookerianum,  King.     (Rosaceae). 

The  bush  here  has  smaller  and  narrower  leaves  than 
usual.    Not  rare  in  the  low  country. 

Carallia  euryoides,  Ridl.  Flora  Mai.  Pen.  1,  1922,  p.  698. 
(Legnotidae) . 

A  small  tree,  branches  slender,  black  with  prominent 
nodes,  leafy  at  the  top  only.  Leaves  coriaceous,  elliptic 
acuminate  with  a  long  blunt  point,  base  cuneate,  edge 
serrulate,  1.75  in.  long,  .5  in.  wide;  nerves  7  pairs  strongly 
inarching,  hardly  invisible  above;  petiole  .25  in.  long. 
Cymes  axillary,  .25  in.  long,  of  3  flowers,  or  compound  of 
3  branches  with  2  flowers  on  each;  pedicels  .1  in,  long. 
Flowers  .12  in.  long.  Calyx  urn-shaped  with  5  coriaceous 
lanceolate  acute  lobes.  Petals  very  narrow  linear  5,  as 
long  as  the  sepals.  Stamens  10,  the  outer  series  slightly 
longer  than  the  inner  row,  about  as  long  as  the  sepals, 
the  filaments  rather  thick;  anthers  elliptic.  Style  stout 
as  long  as  the  sepals;  stigma  rather  large  pulvinate. 
Fruit  small,  ovoid  with  the  persistent  triangular  lanceo- 
late sepals.  On  rocks  about  1,000  feet  altitude.  Not 
common.  Allied  to  C.  Scortechinii  King,  and  montana 
Ridl.,  but  the  leaves  are  entirely  diff'erent  with  the  general 
appearance  of  those  of  Eurya  acuminata.  This  set  of 
Carallias  is  typically  montane  and  very  distinct  from  the 
much  larger  leaved  lowland  species  which  also  have 
larger  cymes. 

Boeckea  frutescens.     (Myrtaceae). 

Perhaps  the  most  abundant  and  conspicuous  shrub 
on  the  rocks.  This  plant  is  typically  a  high  mountain 
plant  of  the  dryer  mountains  such  as  Gunong  Tahan, 
Mount  Ophir  and  Kedah  Peak  at  3  to  4,000  feet  altitude 
and  is  absent  from  the  wetter  mountain  forests  of  the 
main  chain  ^  and  from  Penang.     Its  occurence  on  Klang 

1.  It  occurs  freely  on  Gunong  Terbakar  near  Gunong  Beruni- 
ban  in  the  main  range,  Perak-Pahang  boundary,  where  there  is 
a  heavy  rainfall.     H.C.R, 


i922]  Ridley:  The  Flora  of  ICtang  Gates.  ^9 

Gates  is  very  remarkable.    It  is  reported  also  as  a  seashore 
plant  in  Borneo  and  Trengganu  \ 

Anplectrum  divaricatum,  Triana.     (Melastomaceae). 

In  the  lower  country  a  long  climber,  but  here  I  found 
some  in  the  form  of  a  bush. 

Sonerila  prostrata,  Ridl.  Flora  Mai.  Pen.  1,  1922,  p.  782. 

A  very  slender,  creeping,  prostrate  plant,  stems 
filiform,  several  inches  long,  hairy  red.  Leaves  in  equal 
pairs,  .5  in.  apart,  ovate  hairy  above  with  sparse  wtiite 
hairs,  tip  rounded,  base  round  or  shortly  narrowed,  edge 
serrate  .25  in.  long  and  wide;  petiole  slender,  1  in. 
long.  Flowers  2  on  very  slender  terminal  peduncles; 
pedicels  very  short.  Calyx  urn-shaped  narrowed  upwards 
with  short  acute  teeth,  hairy,  .12  in.  long.  Corolla  bright 
pink,  .25  in.  wide.  Petals  3  or  4,  obovate,  minutely 
apiculatc.  Stamens  3,  nearly  as  long  as  petals;  anthers 
yellow.  Style  slightly  shorter.  Capsule  flask-shaped, 
smooth,  nearly  truncate  with  very  short  points,  .25  in. 
long. 

On  shady  rocks  at  the  entrance  of  the  tunnel  on  the 
road  at  Klang  Gales  forming  a  small  mat  of  stems. 
This  charming  plant  is  utterly  unlike  any  species  of  the 
genus  known  to  me  in  its  prostrate  creeping  stems  and 
very  small  star-like  flowers.  It  is,  however,  I  think  most 
nearly  allied  to  the  slender-stemmed  erect  group  with 
smooth  fruit,  of  which  S.  tenuifolia  is  an  example. 

Aleisanthia  rupestris,  Ridl.     (Rubiaceae) . 

This  is  common  especially  on  the  rocks  above  the 
bungalow  and  Klang  Gates  is  its  only  known  habitat. 
The  only  other  known  species  is  A.  sylvestris  Ridl.,  from 
rather  dry  wooded  hills  at  Kuala  Lebir  in  Kelantan,  a 
tall  shrub.  A.  rupestris  is  a  dwarf  shrub  barely  12  in. 
tall  with  yellow  flowers. 

Embelia  coriacea,  Wall.     (Myrsineae). 

A  climber  with  large  stiff  leaves  and  big  panicles  of 
small  white  flowers.  It  occurs  all  over  the  Peninsula  from 
Singapore  to  Penang  and  in  Java,  Sumatra  and  Borneo. 

Vaccinium  eburiieum,  Ridl.     (Vacciniaceae) . 

A  very  fine  bush,  or  almost  a  tree,  with  abundance 
of  pure  white  flowers.    Also  occurs  on  Kedah  Peak. 


1.  It  is  also  abundant  in  Lower  Siam  north  of  Patelung, 
almost  at  sea  level.  Great  stretches  of  it  can  be  seen  from  the 
railway.     H.C.R. 


250  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Rhododendron  longiflorum,  Lindl.      (Ericaceae). 

A  beautiful  bush  Rhododendron  with  bright  red 
flowers.  On  the  rocks  on  both  ends  of  the  ridge.  It 
occurs  also  in  Perak  and  formerly  in  Singapore  as  an 
epiphyte  on  high  trees,  and  in  Borneo  and  Sumatra. 

Fagraea  auriculata,  Jack.     (Loganiaceae) . 

A  single  plant  on  rocks  behind  the  bungalow.  Not 
in  flower,  I  saw  it  there  on  my  first  visit.  This  plant 
usually  starts  life  as  an  epiphyte  and  eventually  by 
killing  its  host  becomes  a  tree.  It  also  grows  on  rocks. 
Scattered  over  much  of  the  Peninsula  and  the  Malay  Isles. 

Didymocarpus     primulinus,    Ridl.     sp.  nov.      (Cyrtand- 
raceae). 

A  herb  with  a  short,  closely  hairy  stem  about  1  to 
4  inches  long.  Leaves  about  6,  elliptic,  round  at  tip,  base 
round  or  shortly  narrowed,  above  glabrous,  beneath  softly 
densely  hairy,  edge  thickly  hairy;  nerves  8  pairs,  distinct, 
1.5  in.  long,  2.75  in.  wide;  petiole  1  to  2  in.  long,  thick, 
densely  hairy.  Scai)es  very  numerous,  erect,  slender 
from  upper  axils  one-flowered,  2  in.  long,  hairy.  Calyx- 
lobes  linear  acuminate,  .2  in.  long.  Corolla-tube  .5  in. 
long,  limb  .4  in.  long,  unequally  bilobed,  upper  lobes 
oblong,  blunt,  .2  in.  long,  lower  lip  nmcli  longer  .4  in. 
long  with  3  broad  rounded  oblong  lobes  .25  in.  wide.  All 
primrose  yellow  with  an  orange  patch  in  the  mouth. 
Stamens  2,  filaments  slender,  curved  as  long  as  the  tube,- 
anthers  elliptic  connivent.  Capsule  slender,  1.5  in.  long, 
acuminate,  glabrous  when  ripe. 

In  woods  on  the  slope  leading  to  Bukit  Lompat 
Bayan.  This  pretty  plant  seems  to  me  to  be  most  nearly 
allied  to  D.  longipes  Hook,  of  Mt.  Ophir. 

Trema  angustifolium,  Bl.    {Urticaceae). 

Shrub  about  4  feet  tall.  A  clump  of  this  on  the  bare 
rock  on  Bukit  Lompat  Bayan.  Distrih.  Malacca,  Penangj 
Sumatra. 

Ficus  nidica,  L. 

Tree  on  the  high  ridge  above  the  bungalow  collected 
by  Mr,  Kloss  on  his  second  visit.  Common  in  the 
Peninsula. 

Ficus  diversifolia,  Bl.  var.  Kunstleri. 

On  the  ridge  behind  the  bungalow  (C.  B.  Kloss) 
usually  an  epiphyte  and  as  such  on  lofty  trees  common 
in  the  Peninsula. 


1922]  Ridley:   The  Flora  of  Klaiig  Gates.  251 

Ficus  diver  si  folia,  var.  ovoidea. 

A  number  of  bushes  on  rocks  behind  the  bungalow. 
This  is  usually  a  seashore  form:  it  is  quite  erect  and 
terrestrial. 

Choriophylliim  malayarmm,  Benth.     (Eiiphorbiaceae) . 

A  bushy  tree  with  dark  green  leaves  and  greenish- 
white  flowers.  On  rocks  behind  the  bungalow,  a  male 
tree.  A  mountain  plant  and  almost  the  only  plant  in  the 
order  which  ascends  above  2,000  feet. 

Eriachne  pallescens,  Br.     (Gramineae). 

On  rocks  near  the  bungalow,  common  here.  Not 
rare  in  rocky  and  sandy  spots  especially  near  the  sea, 
Singapore,  Selangor,  Ginting  Bidai,  Pahang.  Distrib. 
Chittagong,  Nicobars,  Cochin-China,  China,  Borneo  and 
Australia.  ^ 

Eulalia  Milsiimi,  Ridl.  sp.  nov. 

A  grass  forming  clumps  about  2  feet  tall;  stems 
slender  often  simply  branched,  glabrous.  Leaves  sub- 
distichous,  very  narrow  linear  acuminate,  rather  rigid, 
2  in.  long,  .2  in.  wide  or  narrower,  broadened  and 
truncate  at  base  with  a  central  midrib  fairly  conspicuous; 
ligule  none.  Spikes  one  to  four,  1.5  in.  long  with  a  few 
distant  reduced  leaves.  Rachis  of  spike  terete  fringed 
with  white  silky  hairs,  joints  tufted  silky  white.  Spikelets 
1-stalked  and  1-sessile,  the  stalked  one  articulate  on  a 
silky  fringed  stalk.  Glumes  1  to  III  lanceolate  narrow, 
white  hairy,  awned  from  below  tip,  II  is  very  narrow.  III 
rather  broader.  Valve  (Glume  IV)  very  short,  glabrous 
hyaline  bifid,  lobes  acuminate,  awn  .5  in.  long,  turning 
brown  at  base,  white  above.  Stamens  3;  anthers  yellow, 
oblong.  Style  plumed,  buff.  On  the  bare  rocks  at  Klang 
Gates  on  Bukit  Lompat  Bayan. 

A  very  distinct  species  of  this  genus  which  is 
represented  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  by  three  species 
E.  lanipes  Ridl.,  of  Kedah  Peak,  E.  praemorsa  (Polytrias 
praemorsa)  and  E.  Ridleyi,  Stapf :  a  sand-hill  plant. 

Cibotium  Barometz,  Link.     (Filices). 

Rocks  above  the  bungalow.  Local  on  dry  hills  in 
the  Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra,  Burma,  Assam. 


1922]  Robinson  &  Kloss:  Birds  of  Malacca  Straits.      253 

XVI.  BIRDS  FROM  THE  ONE  FATHOM  BANK 

LIGHTHOUSE,  STRAITS  OF  MALACCA, 

November,    1918   and   November   and   December,    1919, 

by 
H.  C.  Robinson  and  C.  Boden  Kloss. 

The  One  Fathom  Bank  Lighthouse  is  an  erection  on 
a  submerged  bank  in  the  middle  of  the  Straits  of  Malacca 
about  fifteen  miles  distant  from  Pulau  Pintu  Gedong, 
the  nearest  point  of  the  Selangor  Coast  and  about 
26  miles  from  the  Aroa  Islands  towards  the  Sumatran 
coast,  whence  a  collection  has  already  been  reported  on 
(Journ.  Fed.  Malay  States  Mus.  ii,  pp  8-14  (1906).  This 
collection  was  made  during  November  and  is  very 
similar  in  character. 

The  present  list  adds  two  birds  to  the  Fauna  of  the 
Malay  Peninsula,  viz: — 

Chelidon  dasijpus  (Bp.) 

Oceanodroma  monorhis  (Swinh.) 

while  several  species  only  rarely  met  with  on  the  main- 
land were  found  in  abundance. 

With  very  few  exceptions  all  the  specimens  were 
either  killed  against  the  light  or  captured  while  fluttering 
around  it.  Species  which  were  obtained  on  the  Aroa 
Islands  are  marked  with  an  asterisk. 

1.  Treron  nipalensis,  Hodgs.     1^,2$ 

*2.  Ptilinopus  jambu   (Gm.)  .6^,59 

3.  Rallina  fasciata  (Raffles).     6^,11$ 

4.  Rallina  superciliaris   (Eyton) .     15,3? 

*5.  Amaurornis  phoenicura  chinensis  (Bodd.).     l5,l? 

*6.  Sterna  aenetheta.  Scop.     1^,29 

7.  Sterna  fluviatilis  tibetana,  Saunders.     1  $ 

8.  Sterna  (?)  sinensis,  Gm.     2  9 

The  identification  of  these  small  terns  in  immature 
and  winter  plumage  is  a  somewhat  uncertain  matter. 

9.  Oceanodroma  monorhis  (Swinh.).     1  $ 

10.  Terekia  cinerea  (Guldenst).     1^ 

11.  Limonites  subminuita  (Middendorf ) .     l9 

12.  Gallinago  sthenura  (Kuhl) .     1  $ 

13.  Butorides  javanica  javanica  (Horsf .) ,    I  $ 


254  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.          [Vol.  X, 

*14.  Dupetor  flavicoUis    (Lath.) .     1^,49 

15.  Ardetta  sinensis  (Gm.).     1  ,3  ,  1  9 

*16.  Sula  sula   (Linn.).     t$ 

*17.  Accipiter  virgatus  gularis,  Temni.  &  Schleg.     1  9 

*18.  Otus  scops  malayana  (Hay).     1  9 

More  rufous  than  the  majority  of  specimens. 

*19.  Ninox  scutulata  scutulata  (Raffles).     l9 

Wing  211  mm. 

*20.  Halcyon  coromandus  coromandus  (Lath.).     3^,  3  9 

*21.  Halcyon  pileatus  (Bodd.).     1^ 

*22.  Ceyx  tridactyla  (Pall.).     10  5,  2  9 

23.  Eurystomus  orientalis  orientalis   (Linn.).     l9 

*24.  Caprimulgus  indicus  jotaka,  Temm.  &  Schleg.     1  $ 

25.  Collocalia  innominata,  Hume.     2^,19 

*26.  Coccystes  coromandus   (Linn.).     l9 

*27.  Surniculus  lugubris  dicruroides,  Hodgs.     1^,79 

Decidedly  this  form  with  the  wing  in  all  cases  over 
135  mm. 

*28.  Hierococcyx  fugax  nisicolor   (Hodgs.).     3^,19 

*29.  Cuculus  micropterus,  Gould.     1  $ 

*30.  Pitta  cyanoptera,  Temm.     11  $,  10  9 

*31.  Pitta  cucullata,  Hartl.     1$,  10  9 

32.  Hemichelidon  sibirica  fuliginosa,  Hodgs.     7^,29 

*34.  Alseonax  latirostris  (Rafiles).     3$ 

35.  Zanthopygia  xanthopygia  (Hay).     2  9 

36.  Cyanoptila     cyanomelana     cumatilis,     Thayer     and 

Bangs.     1  $ 

37.  Poliomyias  mugimaki  (Temm.) .     5  $  ,  l9 

38.  Terpsiphone  paradisi  incii  (Gould).     I9 

39.  Terpsiphone  atrocaudata   (Eyton) .     1^,19 

40.  Rhinomyias  tardus,  Robinson  &  Kloss.     2^,19 

Very  doubtfully  distinct  from  Rhinomyias  nicobarica, 
Richmond. 

41.  Pericrocotus  cinereus,  Laf r.     3  5,29 

42.  Cichloselys  sibirica  davisoni,  Hume.     12  5  ,  12  9 
*43,     Turdus  obscurus  (Gm.).     I5,  I9 


1922]  Robinson  &  Kloss  :  Birds  of  Malacca  Straits.      255 

*44.  Larvivora  cyanea   (Pall.) .     6  $ 

*45.  Locustellata  lanceolata    (Temm.).     5  5,  9? 

46.  Locustella  certhiola  (Pall.).     l5,l$ 

47.  Acrocephalus  orientalis,  Temm.  &  Schleg.     3  $ 

48.  Phylloscopus  borealis  borealis   (Bias.) .     7  5,4? 

49.  Lanius  cristatus,  Linn.     3  5,1? 

50.  Lanius  tigrinus,  Drap.     1  S   imm. 

51.  Chelidon  dasypus   (Bp.).     1? 

The  occurrence  of  this  rare  martin,  which  breeds  in 
Japan  and  has  been  met  with  on  migration  in  Borneo 
whence  it  was  originally  described,  is  rather  surprising. 
The  single  specimen  appears  perfectly  typical. 


XVIL     A  LIST   OF   BIRDS   COLLECTED   ON   PULAU 
RUMPIA,    SEMBILAN  ISLANDS, 

In  November  and  December,  1918 

by 
H.    C.   Robinson    and   C.    Bodhn   Kix)ss. 

The  following  list  of  birds  collected  by  Mr.  E.  Seimund 
on  Pulau  Rumpia,  one  of  the  Sembilan  Islands  off  the 
mouth  of  the  Perak  River,  in  November  and  December, 
1918  is  of  interest  as  bearing  on  migration  and  migra- 
tion routes  in  the  Malayan  region,  regarding  which  we 
have  as  yet  very  little  exact  knowledge. 

One  bird,  new  to  the  Fauna  of  the  Malay  Peninsula, 
was  obtained: 

Oreocincia  dauma   (Lath.) 

Pulau  Rumpia  is  a  rocky  island  rising  to  a  height 
of  about  600  feet  and  of  very  uneven  surface.  In  extent 
it  is  perhaps  1,500  or  2,000  acres  and  is  densely  forested. 
There  are  two  or  three  small  bays  with  sandy  beaches 
of  no  great  extent.  It  is  the  largest  of  the  Sembilan  Group 
and  is  separated  from  the  other  islands  and  from 
the  mainland  by  depths  approximating  to  twenty-five 
fathoms. 

Except  during  the  migration  season  the  bird  popula- 
tion is  small,  being  confined  to  a  few  nutmeg-pigeoq, 
crows,  sunbirds  and  an  occasional  kingfisher,  excluding  of 
course  the  usual  shore  and  marine  birds. 

1.    Treron  nipalensis,  Hodgs.     1  $ 
2 


256  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

2.  Ptilinopus  jambu   (Gm.).     2  5,4$ 

Of  highly  migratory  habits  and  found  flighting  at 
night  in  many  very  diverse  localities,  such  as  Government 
House,  Singapore,  and  the  Semangko  Pass,  Selangor- 
Pahang  boundary. 

3.  Myristicivora  bicolor   (Scop.).     5^,  1$ 

Common  on  all  the  islands  more  or  less  throughout 
the  year  but  rarely  if  ever  found  away  from  the  coastal 
mangrove  belt  on  the  mainland. 

4.  Chalcophaps  indica  (Linn.).     2$ 

Probably  resident  on  the  island  in  small  numbers 
throughout  the  year. 

5.  Caloenas  nicobarica  (Linn.) .     1  5  ,  2  9 

Possibly  resident,  though  we  have  never  found  it 
in  the  summer  months. 

6.  Tringoides  hypoleucus  (Linn.). 
Found  throughout  the  year. 

7.  Rallina  superciliaris  (Eyton) .     1  $ 

This  rail  and  its  congener  R.  fasciata  are  both  very 
wandering  species. 

8.  Demiegretta  sacra  (Gm.).     1$ 

9.  Gorsachius  melanolophus   (Raffles) .     1  S 

10.  Dupetor  flavicollis  (Lath.).     1$ 

Both  migratory  birds  of  highly  nocturnal  habits. 

11.  Astur  soloensis  (Lath.).     1$   imm. 

A  rare  bird  in  the  Malay  Peninsula;  most  of  our 
specimens  have  been  obtained  in  the  autumn  or  winter 
months  and  it  is  doubtful  if  it  is  a  resident. 

12.  Astur  badius  poliopsis  (Hume) .     1  $  imm. 

An  immature  female  in  process  of  change  to  the 
adult  plumage. 

Also  a  migratory  bird  in  the  south  of  the  Peninsula, 
though  not  improbably  resident  in   the   northern  parts. 

13.  Accipiter  virgatus  gularis,  Temm.  &  Schleg.     3  $  imm, 

10  9    imm. 

Also  a  very  common  migrant  to  the  Malay  Peninsula, 
but  keeping  mainly  to  the  coasts.  Other  than  immature 
birds  in  the  striped  plumage  are  hardly  ever  met  with, 

14.  Eurystomus  orientalis  orientalis  (Linn.).     3^,19 


1922]  Robinson  &  Kloss:  Birds  of  Malacca  Straits.      257 

15.  Eurystomus  orientalis  calonyx,  Sharpe.     1  9 

With  Stuart  Baker  we  are  beginning  to  have  our 
doubts  as  to  the  separability  of- these  forms. 

16.  Alcedo  atthis  bengalensis,  Gm.     1  ^  . 
Resident.                                                                                i 

17.  Ceyx  tridactyla  (Pall.).     1$ 

A  visitor;  but  not  a  migrant  in  the  true  sense. 

18.  Halcyon  pileata  (Bodd.) .     1  $ 

19.  Halcyon  chloris  humii,  Sharpe.     1  $  imm. 
Casual  visitors. 

20.  Caprimulgus  indica  jotaka,  Temm.  &  Schleg.     1^,1$ 

Common  throughout  the  Peninsula  in  the  winter 
months. 

21.  Cuculus  micropterus,  Gould.     1  9 

22.  Hierococcyx  fugax  nisicolor  (Hodgs.).     2  9   imm. 
Only  met  with  in  the  Peninsula  in  winter. 

23.  Eudynamis  scolopacea  malayana.  Cab.     5  ^  ,  11  9 

Probably  partially  resident  but  the  numbers  are 
much  augmented  in  the  winter  months. 

24.  Surniculus  lugubris,  subsp.  ?     2^,29 

It  is  difficult  to  decide  whether  these  cuckoos  should 
be  referred  to  S.  /.  dicruraoides  Hodgs.,  the  northern  race 
or  S.  I.  brachyurus,  Stresemann,  the  southern  form 
described  from  Pahang.  In  size  they  are  intermediate, 
having  a  wing  of  from  131-136  mm, 

25.  Pitta  cyanoptera,  Temm.     1  9  ^ 
Performs  migrations  of  limited  extent. 

26.  Hemichelidon  sibirica  f uliginosa,  Hodgs.     2^,39 

27.  Hemichelidon  ferruginea,  Hodgs.     2  $ 

A  bird  of  passage  merely,  on  the  coasts  and  at  low 
elevations  in  the  Malay  Peninsula.  Probably  resident 
during  the  winter  months  in  the  higher  mountains. 

28.  Muscitrea  grisola  grisola  (Blyth) .     1  9 
Probably  resident. 

29.  Poliomyias  mugimaki   (Temm.).     5^,  15  9 
Migratory. 

30.  Terpsiphone  inch  (Gould).     1$ 
Migratory. 


258  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

31.  Cyanoptila     cyanomelana     cumatilis,     Thayer     and 

Bangs.     1  f 
Cyanoptila   cumatilis,   Thayer   &   Bangs,   Bull.   Mus. 
Comp.  Zool.  Harvard,  III,  1909,  p.  131  (Hupeh,  China). 

Our  specimens  from  the  Malay  Peninsula  conform 
to  the  description  of  Thayer  and  Bangs.  It  is  doubtful 
however  if  they  represent  other  than  a  non-breeding 
plumage  of  the  true  C.  cyanomelana  (Temm.)  from  Japan 
and  it  has  yet  to  be  shown  that  C.  bella  (Hay)  described 
from  Hongkong  does  not  apply  to  the  second  form,  the 
throat  being  described  as  "  dull  blue  black." 

32.  Pericrocotus  cinereus,  Lafr.     1  $ 
Migratory. 

33.  Cichloselys     sibirica     davisoni,     Hume.     2$     imm., 

3  9   imm. 

These  birds  are  all  very  immature,  but  the  Malayan 
race  is  probably  that  described  by  Hume  from  Mulejdt 
if  Geocichla  inframarginata  from  the  Andamans,  des- 
cribed by  BIyth  in  1860,  is  not  the  same  form. 

34.  Tardus  obscurus  (Gm.).     6^,5$ 

A  bird  of  passage  in  the  low  country. 

35.  Oreocincla  dauma  (Lath.) .     1  $ 

A  single  bird  shot  on  the  29th  November,  1918,  agrees 
precisely  with  Oreocincla  dauma,  which  has  not  been 
recorded  from  further  south  than  Central  Tenasserim. 
It  is  not  O.  affinis  Richmond,  from  the  mountains  of 
Peninsular  Siam,  with  which  we  have  compared  it,  that 
species  having  fourteen  and  not  twelve  tail  feathers. 
Wing,  142  mm. 

36.  Locustella  lanceolata  (Temm.).     3$ 

Resident  and  common  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  during 
the  winter  months. 

37.  Phylloscopus  borealis  borealis   (Bias.).     3  5,  2  5 

Common  in  the  Malay  Peninsula.  All  this  series  are 
the  true  A.  b.  borealis  with  the  smaller  first  primary  and 
not  A.  b.  xanthclryas,  with  the  larger  first  primary  extend- 
ing well  beyond  the  coverts,  which  is  occasionally  met 
with. 

38.  Phylloscopus  inornatus  inornatus   (Blyth) .     1  $ 

Reguloides  humei  praemium,  Mathews  and  Iredale 
Austral.  Av.  Record  iii,  p.  45,  1919. 

This  is  the  bird  hitherto  known  as  Acanthopneuste 
superciliosus  (Gm.)*.  The  present  example  is  the  most 
southerly  recorded;  we  have  it  also  from  Taiping. 

*  Cf.  Ticehurst,  Ibis,  1922,  p.  147. 


1922]  Robinson  &  Kloss:  Birds  of  Malacca  Straits.      259 

39.  Aplonis  panayensis  strigatus  (Horsf.).     1? 
Accidental  on  Pulau  Rumpia. 

40.  Motacilla  boarula  melanope,  Pall.     1  9 

A  few  are  generally  to  be  met  with  on  Pulau  Rumpia 
in  the  winter  months.  From  Pulau  Lalang,  distant  two 
or  three  miles  from  P.  Rumpia,  we  have  a  specimen  of 
M.  ftava  simillima,  Hartert,  shot  on  15th  October,  1911. 
This  species  is  very  rare  in  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

41.  Cyrtostomus  ornatus  ornatus  (Less.).     2$ 

Fairly  common  throughout  the  year.  This  is  the 
bird  hitherto  known  as  Arechnecthra  pectoralis  (Horsf.). 


XVIll.    LIST   OF   BIRDS    COLLECTED    ON    PULAU 
JARAK,   STRAITS   OF   MALACCA, 

In  November,  1919,  i 

by 

H.  C.  Robinson  and  C.  Boden  Kloss. 

For  comparison  with  the  birds  collected  on  Pulau 
Rumpia  a  collection  was  also  made  on  Pulau  Jarak, 
Straits  of  Malacca,  in  November,  1919.  Pulau  Jarak  is 
a  small  island,  about  three  hundred  acres  in  extent,  rising 
steeply  from  the  sea  to  a  height  of  600  feet.  It  is  densely 
covered  with  vegetation  and  has  no  beaches  and  is 
entirely  uninhabited. 

Large  numbers  of  a  peculiar  rat  (Rattus  rattus  jarak, 
Bonhote)  are  found  on  it  and  a  slightly  differentiated 
form  of  a  widely  spread  fruit  bat  {Pteropus  hypomelanus 
fretensis,  Kloss).  As  might  be  expected  the  birds 
obtained  are  not  materially  different  from  those  on 
Pulau  Rumpia  from  which  island  Pulau  Jarak  is  distant 
about  34  miles  almost  due  west,  the  maximum  depth  of 
the  intervening  sea  being  about  30  fathoms. 

List. 

1.  Myristicivora  bicolor   (Scop.).     2$ 

2.  Caloenas  nicobarica  (Linn.) .     1^,1$ 

3.  Amaurornis  phaenicura  chinensis  (Bodd.).     1^,39 

4.  Butorides  javanica  javanica  (Horsf.) .     2^,1? 

5.  Dupetor  flavicollis   (Lath.).     1^,  2  9 

6.  Demiegretta  sacra  (Gm.).     l9 

7.  Gorsachius  melanolophus  (Raffles).     2s,  2  9 


260  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.  [Vol.  X, 

8.  Anous  stolidus  pileatus  (Bodd.).     1$ 

The  black  noddy  is  extremely  rare  in  the  Straits  of 
Malacca  and  this  is  only  the  second  specimen  on  record. 

9.  Sterna  fluviatilis  tibetana,  Saunders. 

We  are  inclined  to  refer  the  terns  of  this  type 
obtained  in  the  Straits  of  Malacca  in  winter  to  this 
race  of  the  Common  tern  and  not  to  the  Kamchatkan, 
Sterna  longipennis  Nordman,  as  has  been  done  by  many 
authors. 

10.  Accipiter  virgatus  gularis,  Temm.  &  Schleg.     3^,6$ 
All  these  specimens  are  immature. 

11.  Astur  soloensis  (Horsf.).     \$ 
A  very  nearly  adult  male. 

12.  Otus  scops  malayana  (Hay) .     1  $ 
A  moderately  rufescent  bird. 

13.  Ninox  scutulata  scutulata  (Raffles) .     2^,4$ 

All  belonging  to  the  migratory  form  with  the  wing 
over  210  mm. 

14.  Halcyon  coromandus  coromandus   (Lath.).    6^,3$. 

15.  Halcyon  pileatus  (Bodd.) .2$ 

16.  Caprimulgus  indicus  jotaka,  Temm.  &  Schleg.     1  $ 

17.  Eudynamis  scolopacea  malayana,  Cab.     2  $ 

18.  Cuculus  micropterus,  Gould.     1  $ 

19.  Pitta  cyanoptera,  Temm.     \  $ 

20.  Alseonax  latirostris  (Raffles).     2$ 

21.  Hemichelidon  ferruginea,  Hodgs.     1  5  ,  1  $ 

22.  Cyanoptila     cyanomelana     cumatilis,     Thayer     and 

Bangs.     1  $ 

23.  Terpsiphone  atrocaudata,  Eyton.     2  $   imm. 
Terpsiphone  princeps,  auct. 

Two  immature   specimens.     The  bird  is  very  rare, 
or  only  makes  a  very  brief  stay  in  the  Malay  Peninsula, 
whence  we  have  Mily  three  other  specimens. 

24.  Monticola  solitarius  philippinensis  (Mull.).     1  $ 

25.  Cichloselys  sibirica  davisoni  (Hume) .     9^,5? 
Adults  are  very  typical  C  s.  davisoni. 

26.  Larvivora  cyanea  (Pall.).     3  5 

27.  Locustella  lanceolata  (Temm.).     4^,2? 

28.  Phylloscopus  borealis  borealis   (Bias.).     6^,2$ 

29.  Dicrurus  annectens,  Hodgs.     7  5,1$ 
Quite  typical. 


1922]  Robinson  &  Kloss  :  Three  New  Oriental  Birds.      261 

XIX.    THREE  NEW   ORIENTAL   BIRDS. 

By  H.  C.  Robinson  and  C.  Boden  Kloss. 

Otus  luciae  siamensis,  siibsp.  nov. 

Heteroscops  vulpes,  Robinson,  Journ.  Fed.  Malay- 
States  Mus.  V,  1914,  p.  91  (Bandon) ;  Gyldenstolpe,  Ibis, 
1920,  p.  752. 

Otus  liiciae,  Robinson  &  Kloss,  Journ.  Nat.  Hist.  Soc. 
Siam,  v.,  1922,  p.  111. 

A  very  rufous  form  of  Otus  luciae  (Sharpe).  The 
black  markings  on  the  crown,  nape  and  tail  much  reduced 
and  the  spots  on  the  back  obsolete :  wings  and  tail  strongly 
washed  with  rufous,  the  outer  webs  of  the  wing  feathers 
scarcely  blackened,  the  pale  wing  bars  much  obscured. 
The  undersurface  paler  and  the  spots  and  vermiculations 
obsolete.  Differs  similarly,  but  to  a  less  degree,  from 
O.  vulpes.  Grant,  from  Gunong  Tahan,  5,000  feet,  Pahang. 
We  are  not  prepared  to  accept  imlpes  as  different  from 
the  Kinabalu  bird. 

Type.  Adult  female  from  Kao  Nong,  Bandon,  3,500 
feet.  Peninsular  Siam:  collected  on  23rd  June,  1913. 

A  male  from  Kao  Luong,  5,000  feet,  in  the  same 
mountain  range,  differs  only  in  having  the  black  markings 
on  the  head  a  little  more  pronounced  and  in  being  a 
trifle  darker  beneath. 

Compared  with  one  example  of  O.  luciae  from  N. 
Sarawak  and  seven  from  the  Malay  States  (O.  vulpes. 
Grant). 

Cyornis  anak,  sp.  nov. 

Size  as  in  Cyornis  magnirostris,  Blyth,  but  the  bill 
markedly  smaller:  males  with  the  breast  a  deeper  rufous 
and  the  blackish-blue  of  the  sides  of  the  neck  extending 
to  restrict  the  rufous  area  of  the  throat  to  a  small  A 
shaped  area  falling  considerably  short  of  the  mandible: 
upper  parts  deeper  blue. 

Females  like  those  of  magnirostris  but  the  under- 
parts  paler;  the  abdomen  more  extensively  white  owing 
to  lesser  infuscation  of  the  flanks,  undertail-coverts 
white,  the  pale  area  of  the  throat  restricted  as  in  the 
males;  the  upper  parts  rather  browner,  less  olivaceous. 

Type.  Adult  male  from  Krongmun,  Trang,  Penin- 
sular Siam:  collected  on  16th  February,  1910.  Specimens 
examined :  the  typ.e,  a  male  from  Kao  Luong,  2,000  feet, 
Nakawn  Sri  Tamarat,  a  female  from  Nongkok,  Ghirbi 
and  a  female  (?  vixad.)  from  Chong,  Trang;  collected  on 
23rd  March,  1922,  12th  January,  1918  and  16th  February, 
1910,  .    ^ 


262  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.        [Vol.  X, 

Measurement:  Wing  $  78*,  79,  5  77,  72:  bill  from 
gape   $  19*,  18  9   17,  16.5  mm. 

Compared  with  two  males  and  two  females  of 
C.  magnirostris  and  a  large  series  of  C.  caerulifrons 
Baker — a  much  smaller  bird.  We  cannot  refer  these 
examples  to  any  known  form  and  are  very  reluctantly 
impelled  to  give  them  a  new  name. 

Kittacincla  malabarica  interposita,  subsp.  nov. 

Kittacincla  macrnrus  macrurus,  Robinson  &  Kloss, 
Ibis,  1919,  p.  596. 

Differs  from  K.  m.  malabarica  (Scop.)  of  India 
and  Burma  (type  locality  Malabar)  by  its  darker 
female  and  from  K.  m.  tricolor  (Vieill.)  of  the  southern 
half  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Sumatra  and  West  Java 
(type  locality)  in  having  the  feathers  of  the  thighs  in 
both  sexes  white,  hardly  tinged  with  rusty.  From  this  new 
race  K.  malabarica  macrourus  (Gm.)  of  Pulau  Condore, 
off  Cochin-China,  differs  in  being  paler  on  the  breast  in 
males  and  having  less  black  on  the  outer  tail-feathers. 

Range.  From  South  Annam  and  Cochin-China  to 
Tenasserim  and  down  the  Malay  Peninsula  to  about 
Trang  as  far  as  ascertained. 

Type,  Adult  male  from  Daban,  South  Annam: 
collected  on  14th  March,  1918,  by  Boden  Kloss.  Wing 
94  mm. 

Many  specimens  examined  from  the  range  indicated. 
*  Type. 


1922]  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  263 

XX.       ON     A     COLLECTION     OF     REPTILES     AND 

BATRACHIANS  FROM  THE  MOUNTAINS  OF 

PAHANG,  MALAY  PENINSULA. 

By  Malcolm  A.  Smith,  F.Z.S. 

The  present  report  is  based  upon  collections  made 
in  two  separate,  but  not  far  distant  localities: — (1)  from 
Gunong  Tahan,  the  highest  mountain  of  the  Malay 
Peninsula,  and  (2)  from  Eraser's  Hill,  an  area  on  the 
main  peninsula  range  of  considerably  less  altitude,  north 
of  the  well-known  Semangko  Pass,  between  Selangor  and 
Pahang,  and  not  a  part  of  the  same  range,  and  about  70 
miles  S.W.  of  Gunong  Tahan. 

The  bulk  of  the  collection  is  from  the  first-named 
locality,  and  was  made  by  the  F.M.S.  Museums  in  connec- 
tion with  the  metoorolgical  survey  of  Gunong  Tahan 
which  has  been  undertaken  during  the  past  two  years. 
I  am  indebted  to  Mr.  Herbert  Robinson,  Director  of 
Museums,  for  the  privilege  of  examining  it. 

The  following  are  the  chief  localities  referred  to: — 

Kuala  Teku.  The  confluence  of  the  Tahan  and  Teku 
Rivers  at  the  foot  of  the  Tahan  massif.  Height  about  550 
feet  above  sea  level. 

Kuala  Tahan.  The  confluence  of  the  Tahan  and 
Tembeling  Rivers  about  fourteen  miles  below  Kuala  Teku. 
Height  about  230  feet  above  sea  level. 

Wray's  camp.  A  halting  place  about  four  hours  walk 
from  Kuala  Teku.     Height  above  sea  level.     3,300  feet. 

Padang.  The  main  station  on  Gunong  Tahan.  Height 
above  sea  level  about  5,400-5,700  feet. 

Gunong  Gedong.  One  of  the  peaks  of  the  eastern 
Tahan  range.     Height  above  sea  level  about  6,400  feet. 

All  the  specimens  from  Eraser's  Hill  were  taken  in 
June  last,  at  an  elevation  of  between  3,000  and  4,000  feet. 

With  regard  to  the  text  of  the  report,  the  numbers 
referred  to  are  those  of  my  own  private  register. 

F.M.P.,  where  used  as  a  reference,  indicates 
"  Boulenger's  Fauna  of  the  Malay  Peninsula,  Reptilia 
and  Batrachia,  1912." 

The  claim  of  Rana  lateralis  Boulenger,  to  be  included 
in  the  fauna  of  the  Peninsula,  (based  on  a  single  speci- 
men), is  shown  to  be  incorrect  (see  R.  miopus). 

3 


264  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.        [Vol.  X, 

Two  new  forms  are  described: — - 
Rana  cataracta 
Kalophrynus  rohinsoni. 

Seven  species  appear  new  to  the  Peninsula: — 

Chitra  indica    (Gray). 
Coluber  prasinus  Blyth. 
Polyodontophis  collaris   (Gray). 
Lygosoma  indicum  (Gray). 
Rana  miopus  Boulenger. 
Rana  picturata  Boulenger. 
Kaloula  haleata  (Mueller). 

CHELONIANS. 

Chitra  indica  (Gray). 

Bouleng.,  Cat.  Chelonians  B.M.,  1889,  p.  264;  Siebenrock, 
Zool.  Jahrb.,  1909,  Suppl.  10,  p.  608  ;  Annandale,  Rec.  Ind.  Mus., 
1912,  VII.,  p.  169,'  pi.  VI.,  figs.  1  &  2. 

The  discovery  of  this  species,  one  of  the  largest  of 
the  freshwater  turtles,  in  the  Malay  Peninsula  is  a  fine 
extension  of  its  known  range.  It  has  previously  been 
recorded  from  the  Ganges  and  Irrawady  river  systems. 

This  turtle  has  also  been  met  with  in  the  Ratburi 
river.  Western  Siam,  two  adult  specimens  having  been 
caught  near  Kanburi.  These  two  examples,  which  I 
examined  alive,  differed  from  the  description  of  the 
Indian  form  in  that  the  disc  was  marked  with  numerous, 
pale  broad  lines  and  angular  markings. 

Although  of  not  such  a  fierce  disposition  as  the 
common  Trionyx  cartilagineus,  they  would  when  irri- 
tated suddenly  shoot  out  their  long  necks  with  lightning- 
like rapidity  and  were  capable  of  giving  one  a  vei-y 
severe  bite. 

Testudo  impressa  (Gunther). 
Testudo  latinuchalis,  F.M.P.,  p.  15. 

Testudo  impressa,  Malcolm  Smith,  Journ.  N.  H.  S.  Siam,  1922, 
IV.,  p.  204. 

One  adult  male  specimen  from  Eraser's  Hill  ;  length 
of  shell  in  a  straight  line  260  mm.  (No.  6591). 


1922J  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  26o 

SNAKES. 
Typhops  nigroalbus,  D.  &  B. 
1  ad,  from  the  Tembeling  river. 
26  scales  round  the  body. 

Polyodontophis  collaris  (Gray). 

Bouleng.,  Cat.  Sn.  Brit.  Mus.,  1893,  I.,  p.  184. 

1    3   from  Padang,  Gunong  Tahan   (No.  5980). 

Sc.  17  rows  throughout,  V.  161,  C.  100.  Temporals 
1   +  2,  10  supralabials.     Total  length  473  mm.,  tail  72. 

Dark  brown  above;  a  black  vertebral  line  and  two 
pale  lateral  ones;  a  black  occipital  bar,  and  another  just 
behind  on  the  neck.  All  the  markings  are  very  indistinct. 
White  below  with  a  series  of  lateral  spots,  confluent  with 
the  colouring  of  the  back.    Upper  lip  with  a  white  streak. 

Gunong  Tahan  is  a  considerable  extension  south- 
wards of  the  known  range  of  this  species.  The  specimen 
is  considerably  darker  in  colour  than  any  of  those  I  have 
seen  from  further  north  in  Siam, 

Natrix  chrysargus  (Schleg.). 

Tropidonotus    chrysargiis    F.M.P.,    p.    127. 

Seven  examples  from  Kuala  Teku  and  Kuala  Tahan, 
3  from  Eraser's  Hill.  One  juvenile  (total  length  240  mm.) 
is  light  brown  in  colour  with  black  reticulations. 


No. 

Sex. 

Ventrals. 

Caudals 

5889 

S 

159 

80 

5890 

£ 

159 

82 

5894 

i 

156 

88 

5892 

6 

164 

92 

6584 

juv. 

148 

110 

6586 

juv. 

160 

106 

5893 

9 

146 

58? 

5891 

juv. 

156 

88 

6585 

9 

161 

30 

$ 

161 

89 

Macropisthodon  rhodomelas  (Boie). 
Kuala  Tahan  2  examples,  Wray's  camp  1  example. 
No.  Sex.       Ventrals.     Caudals. 

5896  9  143  42 
5898             s               135                53 

5897  juv.  139  48 


266  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Macropisthodon  flaviceps  (D.  &  B.). 
1   $  Kuala  Tahan.    No.  5895. 
Ventrals  119.     Caudals  61. 

Coluber  oxycephalus    Boie. 
One  immature  female  (No.  5979)  from  Kuala  Tahan. 

Scales  25.25.17.,  V.  246.,  C.  130.  Green  above  paler 
below,  tail  yellowish-brown,  unbarred. 

Coluber  prasinus  Blyth. 
Cat.  Sn.  Brit.  Mus.,  II.,  1894,  p.  59. 
One   5    (No.  5999)  from  Wray's  camp. 

Previously  known  from  the  Eastern  Himalayas  to 
Shan  States  (Burma),  this  is  a  considerable  extension  of 
its  range  of  distribution.  Except  in  the  longer  loreal  and 
shorter  anterior  chin  shields  this  specimen  agrees  entirely 
with  the  description  and  with  an  example  in  the  Indian 
Museum  (No.  16663)  from  Yunnan  with  which  I  have 
compared  it. 

Loreal  nearly  twice  as  long  as  deep;  one  praeocular, 
not  in  contact  with  the  frontal;  temporals  2  -[-  2;  anterior 
chin  shields  a  little  shorter  than  the  posterior:  scales  in 
19  rows  reducing  to  13  before  the  vent.  Ventrals  203, 
anal  2,  caudals  105  (extreme  tip  of  tail  missing).  Maxil- 
lary teeth  22  ;  mandibular  25. 

Dendrophis  pictus  (Gm.). 

One   9   Kuala  Teku  (No.  5975). 

Scales  15.15.11.  V.  160,  C.  130. 

Supralabials  8  and  9.  The  praeoculars  in  good 
contact  with  the  frontal.  Chin  and  throat  white,  rest 
of  belly  and  tail  below,  pale  bronze. 

Macrocalamus  lateralis  Giinth. 

F.M.P.,  p.  153. 

A  single  example  of  this  rare  snake  from  Padang, 
Gunong  Tahan  (No.  5981). 

Scales  in  15  rows  throughout,  ventrals  172.  Caudals 
30.  A  large  loreal,  twice  as  long  as  high;  no  distinct 
posterior  chin  shields. 

Colour.  Darker  brownish  above.  A  dark  band  from 
tl^e  eye  to  the  last  labial  with  a  yellow  border  above; 
two  indistinct  yellow  V  shaped  marks  on  the  neck  ; 
labials  yellow.  Belly  yellow  spotted  with  black.  A  black 
line  at  the  outer  margin  of  the  ventrals  and  a  median 
subcaudal  one.     Total  length  200  mm.     Tail  30. 


1922]  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  267 

Pseudorhabdium  longiceps  (Cantor). 
One  example  from  Fraser's  Hill. 

A  common  snake  in  the  Peninsula  at  low  levels  but 
not  usually  found  at  any  altitude. 

Calamaria  pavimentata  D.  &  B. 
F.M.P.,  p.  157. 

One  9  immature.    Padang,  Gunong  Tahan. 
Ventrals  164.     Caudals  16. 

Psammodynastes  pulverulentus  (Boie) . 

Three  adults.  Padang,  Gunong  Tahan  and  Kuala 
Teku. 

Scales  17.17.15.,  ventrals  $  170,  $  173,  174.  Caudals 
$  61,   9  57,.  60. 

This  species  and  Lachesis  sumatrana  are  the  only 
species  other  than  very  rare  on  Gunong  Tahan.  Both 
are  common  there  as  on  other  high  mountains  in  the 
Malay  Peninsula. 

Doliophis  intestinalis  (Luar.). 

F.M.P.,  p.  206. 

Two  examples  from  Kuala  Tahan  and  Kuala  Teku. 

No.  5902,  juv.  V.  250.,  C.  26;  No.  5903,  9  V.  242.  C.  21. 

Colour  (in  spirit).  Jet  black  above  and  on  the  sides, 
with  3  narrow  white  lines,  the  vertebral  (not  bifurcated) 
starting  from  the  neck  and  extending  to  the  tip  of  the 
tail,  the  laterals  occupying  the  upper  half  of  the  outer 
row  of  scales  and  the  lower  half  of  the  row  next  and 
extending  to  the  vent.  Belly  with  broad  transverse  bars 
of  black  and  white;  tail  below  orange,  with  two  narrow 
bars.    Top  of  head  brown  mottled  black. 

Trimeresurus  gramineus   (Shaw). 

Lachesis  gramineus,  F.M.P.,  p.  17. 

Two  specimens  from  Fraser's  Hill.  Green  above, 
pale  blue  below  ;  outer  row  of  scales  white  in  the 
upper  half,  dull  red  in  the  lower.  This  red  pigment 
in  the  flank  band  is  common  in  examples  from  farther 
north  (N.  Siam),  but  does  not  appear  to  have  been 
recorded  before  from  the  Peninsula.  It  does  not  occur 
in  specimens  from  Bangkok  and  the  surrounding  country 
where  this  snake  is  common. 

Boulenger's  statement  (p.  217)  that  this  species  is 
without  distinct  canthus  rostralis  is  not  borne  out  in 
specimens  I  have  examined.  In  most  adults  it  is  well 
marked. 


2^8  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Trimeresunis  sumatranus  (Raffles). 

Lachesis  sumatraiia,  F.M.P.,  p.  217. 

One   9  .    Kuala  Teku.     (No.  5978). 

Scales  21.21.15.  V.  186,  C.  80.  7  scales  between  the 
supraoculars. 

Verdant  green  above,  with  two  chains  of  pink  spots 
down  the  back  coalescing  on  the  base  of  the  tail  to  form 
cross-bars.  A  pink  temporal  streak,  and  a  white  line 
down  the  side  on  the  outermost  row  of  scales.  Ventrals 
and  anterior  subcaudals  bright  green;  posterior  half  of 
tail  red  above,  white  below. 

LIZARDS. 
Gymnodactylus  marmoratus  (Kuhl.). 
One  young   $   from  Kuala  Tahan  (No.  6002). 

Gonatodes  kendalli  (Gray). 

F.M.P.,  p.  38;  Malcolm  Smith,  Journ.  N.  H.  S.  Siam,  1916, 
11.,  p.  151. 

One  example  from  Eraser's  Hill. 

I  have  already  (loc.  cit.  sup.),  drawn  attention  to  the 
fact  that  a  form  of  this  Gecko  exists  identical  in  all 
respects  with  the  typical  one  except  that  the  male  poss- 
esses 6  to  8  praeanal  pores  in  an  obtuse-angled  series. 
The  present  example  is  another  instance  of  this  form, 
there  being  6  pores  separated  by  an  enlarged  scale. 

Draco  fimbriatus  Kuhl. 
One   $   from  Wray's  camp,  (No.  5983). 

Draco  melanopogon  Rouleng. 
Two   s  from  Kuala  Tahan. 

Draco  volans  Linn. 
One  $   from  Kuala  Tahan. 

Draco  formosus  Bouleng. 

F.M.P.,  p.  61. 

One  ad.  ^ ,  1  ad.   $ ,  Kuala  Teku  Nos.  5984,  5907. 

The  female  specimen  confirms  what  I  have  previously 
stated  (Journ.  N.  H.  S.  Siam,  II.,  p.  153)  that  the  throat 
is  maroon  or  crimson,  not  green  as  given  by  authors. 

Gonyocephalus  borneensis  (Schleg.). 

1  ad.  $ ,  No.  5906.  The  gular  sac  in  this  specimen  is 
unusually  small. 


1922]  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  269 

Gonyocephalus  robinsoni  Bouleng. 

Journ.  F.M.S.  Mus.  III.,  1908,  p.  65,  pi.  V..;  idem.  F.M.P.,  p. 
67,  fig.  19. 

One   9   ad.  and  1  juv.  from  Padang,  Gunong  Tahan. 

Previously  known  from  1  ad.  $  and  1  young  one. 
The  adult  agrees  well  with  Boulenger's  description.  The 
gular  pouch  is  fully  as  large  as  in  the  male.  There  are 
a  few  unevenly  disposed  enlarged  scales  upon  the  flanks. 
9  upper  and  9  lower  labials;  72  scales  round  the  middle 
of  the  body,  the  laterals  not  much  smaller  than  the 
dorsals.    The  third  and  fourth  fingers  are  of  equal  length. 

Head  and  body,  125  mm.,  tail  300. 

The  juv.  (No.  5990)  has  a  head  and  body  of  46  mm., 
and  a  tail  of  105.  Gular  pouch  well  developed.  8  upper 
and  8  lower  labials.  About  80  scales  round  the  body  with 
enlarged  ones  as  in  the  adult. 

Calotes  floweri  Bouleng. 

F.M.P.,  p.  70. 

One  juv.  from  Gunong  Gedong,  No.  5905. 

Fifty-seven  scales  round  the  middle  of  the  body. 
Greyish  brown   above,  without  dark  patches. 

This  form  has  not  yet  been  found  below  6,000  feet 
in  the  Malay  Peninsula. 

Calotes  cristatellus  (Kuhl.). 

F.M.P.,  p.  70. 

Kuala  Tahan,  2  ad.   9 .,  Nos.  5904,  5988. 

Green  with  a  large  chocolate  patch  on  either  flank; 
the  hind  limb  reaches  the  eye;  80  and  85  scales  round  the 
middle  of  the  body.  Boulenger's  statement  that  this 
species  has  up  to  120  scales  round  the  middle  of  the  body 
needs  I  think  confirmation.  I  have  never  yet  seen  any 
examples  with  more  than  100,  although  I  have  examined 
numerous  specimens  from  all  parts  of  the  Malay  Peninsula 
and  Archipelago. 

Varanus  dumerilii  (S.  Miill.). 
F.M.P.,  p.   77. 

Kuala  Teku,  1  ex.  (No.  5908). 

A  very  young  specimen  which  I  refer  to  this  species. 

Mabuia  multifasciata  (Kuhl.). 

Seven  specimens  from  Kuala  Tahan  and  Kuala  Teku. 

Thirty-four  scales  round  the  body  in  five,  32  in  two  ; 
dorsals  tricarinate  in  all.  The  hind  limb  reaches  the 
axilla  in  two, 


270  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.X, 

Lygosama  indicum   (Gray). 

Bouleng.,  Fauna  Brii.  Ind.,  Rept.,  p.  195. 

Two  young  examples  from  Eraser's  Hill. 

As  was  expected,  this  lizard  with  its  wide  range  from 
the  Eastern  Himalayas  to  Southern  China,  Burma,  Siam 
and  Indo-China  has  now  been  found  also  in  the  Malay 
Peninsula. 

Lygosoma  butleri  Bouleng. 

F.M.P.,  p.  91. 

One  example  from  Eraser's  Hill  (No.  6590). 
Hitherto  recorded  only  from  the  Larut  Hills,  Perak. 

Distance  between  the  end  of  the  snout  and  fore-limb 
less  than  1^  times  in  distance  between  axil  and  groin, 
10  and  11  subdigital  lamellae  beneath  the  fourth  toe. 

Brown  above  and  on  the  sides,  thickly  spotted  with 
yellow.    No  dark  lateral  band.    Below  yellowish.    From 

snout  to  vent  29  mm.,  tail  42. 

« 

Lygosoma  olivaceum   (Gray). 
Two  examples  from  Kuala  Tahan. 
Thirty  scales  round  the  body,  dorsals  tricarinate. 

Lygosoma  vittigerum  Bouleng. 

F.M.P.,  p.  94,  Malcolm  Smith,  Journ.  N.  H.  S.  Siam,  1922,  IV., 
p.  208. 

One  example  from  Kuala  Teku   (No.  5909). 

It  has  30  scales  round  the  body  and  with  the  other 
specimen  from  Kuala  Teku  recorded  by  Boulenger  has 
the  praefrontals  in  broad  contact  with  each  other.  These 
two  specimens  and  one  other  from  Ginting  Bidai  appear 
to  be  the  only  records  of  this  species  in  the  Malay 
Peninsula. 

Lygosoma  cophias  Bouleng. 

Journ.  Fed.  Mai.  States  Mus.  III.,  p.  67,  PI.  IV.,  Fig.  3  ; 
F.M.P.,  p.  96. 

One  spec,  from  Wray's  camp.  (No.  5910). 

Known  from  a  single  specimen  previously  obtained 
on  Gunong  Tahan.  This  second  exainple  differs  from  the 
type  description  in  the  following  particulars: — Distance 
between  end  of  snout  and  fore-limb  If  times  in  distance 
between  axil  and  groin.  A  pair  of  distinctly  enlarged 
praecaudals.     10  lamellae  beneath  the  fourth  toe. 

Head  and  body  55  mm.,  tail  48;  arm  6;  leg  9. 


1922]  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachiatis.  271 

Lygosoma  larutense  Bouleng. 

F.M.P.,   p.   97. 

One  specimen  Padang,  Gunong  Tahan. 

Previously  known  only  from  the  Larut  Hills,  Perak. 
The  specimen  has  28  scales  round  the  middle  of  the  body. 
There  are  6  and  7  supralabials,  the  fourth  (or  fifth)  which 
is  subocular  being  wedge-shaped,  its  apex  not  quite  reaching 
the  margin  of  the  lip. 

Total  length  205,  head  and  body  90  ;  fore-limb  7  ;  hind 
limb  1 0  ;  from  snout  to  fore-limb  20  ;  fore-limb  to  hind 
limb  66  mm. 

Dark  grey  on  the  back  and  sides,  yelloWish-white  below. 
Neck  with  3  narrow  transverse,  yellowish  bars,  back  with 
6  fine  longitudinal  lines. 

BATRACHIANS. 

Oxyglossus  laevis  Gunth. 

F.M.P.,  p.  225. 

Seven  examples  from  Kuala  Tahan  (Nos.  6045-6049) 
Largest  32  mm.  from  snout  to  vent. 

I  have  recently  also  examined  a  large  series  of  this  frog 
from  Mount  Dulit,  Borneo.  The  Gunong  Tahan  specimens 
agree  well  with  the  Bornean  individuals,  and  differ  from 
Siamese  examples  in  the  larger  size  of  the  discs  of  the  toes 
and  in  having  the  belly  always  unspotted. 

Rana  laticeps  Bouleng. 
F.M.P.,   p.   230. 

Three  examples  from  Wray's  camp  and  the  Tahan 
river. 

Very  common  on  Eraser's  Hill  whence  a  large  series 
was  obtained. 

Apparently  known  in  the  Peninsula  previously,  with 
certainty,  only  from  Gunong  Kledang,  Perak. 

The  tibio-tarsal  articulation  may  reach  the  tip  of  the 
snout. 

Colour.  Light  or  dark  greyish  with  dark  grey  mark- 
ings. The  yv  shaped  mark  on  the  back  is  present  in  most 
juveniles,  often  enclosing  a  dull  orange  patch  in  life,  but 
indistinct  or  absent  in  the  adults.  Below  white,  the  throat 
and  limbs  with  small  black  spots.  A  thin  pale  vertebral 
line  sometimes  present. 

Rana  doriae  Bouleng. 
Rec.  Ind.  Mus.,  1920,  XX,  p.  49  ;  F.M.P.,  p.  231  ;  Malcolm  Smith, 
Journ.  N.H.S.  Siam,  1922,  IV,  p.  217. 

One  female  (No.  5922)  from  Kuala  Tekq, 

4 


272  Journal  of  the  FM.S.  Museums.         [Vol.X, 

Predominating  colour  above  reddish-brown,  with  small 
black  markings  ;  throat  and  chest  handsomely  mottled  with 
brown. 

Rana  plicatella  Stoliczka. 

Bouleng.,  Rec,  Ind.  Mus.,   1920,  XX,  p.   53  ;   Malcolm   Smith, 
Journ.  N.H.S.  Siara,  1922,  IV,  p.  227. 

Three  adult  males,  Fraser's  Hill.  I  have  recently  dealt 
very  fully  with  these  specimens  and  the  place  of  this  frog 
in  the  R.  doriae  group  {loc.  cit.  sup.) . 

Rana  macrodon  D.  &  B, 

Rec.  Ind.  Mus.,  1920,  XX,  p.  40. 

Three  half-grown  examples  from  Kuala  Tahan  ;  two 
adults  and  1  half  grown  from  Fraser's  Hill. 

I  place  these  specimens  under  Boulenger's  var.  blijthii, 
a  dubius  race  as  its  characters  do  not  coincide  with  any 
definite  geographical  distribution.  In  the  younger  speci- 
mens the  tibio-tarsal  articulation  usually  reaches  to  beyond 
the  tip  of  the  snout,  in  the  adults  to  not  quite  so  far. 

Rana  glandulosa  Bouleng. 
Rec.  Ind.  Mus.,  1920,  XX,  p.  181. 
Two  examples  from  Fraser's  Hill. 

Rana  picturata  Bouleng. 

Rec.  Ind.  Mus.,  1920,  XX,  p.  179. 

Seven  examples  from  Kuala  Teku  and  Kuala  Tahan 
(Nos.  5913-5915  and  6028-6031).  The  species  has  hitherto 
been  found  only  in  Borneo.  The  largest,  a  male,  is  57  mm. 
frofti  snout  to  vent  ;  the  largest  female  is  55  mm.  Two 
females  taken  at  the  end  of  November  are  full  of  ripe  ova. 

Colouration.  Black  above,  handsomely  spotted  and 
marked  with  yellow  or  yellowish-brown.  Five  of  the  speci- 
mens have  a  yellow  band  starting  from  the  tip  of  the  nose 
and  passing  along  the  canthus  rostralis,  the  margin  of  the 
eyelid  and  down  the  back  on  either  side  to  the  groin.  Lower 
parts  hrown,  with  small  white  spots  in  four  examples, 
whitish,  uniform  in  two,  whitish  with  black  spots  in  one. 

Two  of  the  specimens,  both  $ ,  have  large  irregular 
flat  glandules  on  the  back. 

This  species  closely  resembles  R.  glandulosa  to  which 
I  at  first  referred  them,  but  it  can  be  recognized  by  the 
more  extensive  web  to  the  toes,  and  the  more  ornate 
colouration.    The  male  also  has  internal  vocal  vesicles. 


1922]  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  273 

Rana  luctuosa  (Peters). 
F.M.P.,  p.  238. 
Fourteen  examples  from  Fraser's  Hill. 

Rana  miopus  Bouleng. 

Rana  miopus  Bouleng.,  Journ.  N.H.Soc.  Siani,  1918,  III,  p.  11  ; 
idem,  Rec.  Ind.  Mus.,  1920,  XX,  p.  149. 

Rana  lateralis,  Laidlaw,  P.Z.S.,  1900,  p.  886,  pi.  LVII,  figs.  1  &  2  ; 
Bouleng.   (in  part)   F.M.P.,  1912,  p.  239. 

Two  adult  males  (Nos.  5911  &  5912)  from  Kuala 
Tembeling,  and  1  juvenile  (No.  6037)  from  Kuala  Tahan. 

Originally  discovered  in  the  mountains  of  Nakon 
Sritamarat,  Peninsular  Siam,  this  frog  was  described  from 
an  adult  female  specimen  and  a  juvenile.  A  male  taken 
at  the  same  time,  and  until  recently  in  my  possession,* 
agrees  well  with  these  individuals  from  Gunong  Tahan. 
They  have  the  curious  blackish,  obliquely-running  fine 
glandular  folds  across  the  back  which  are  to  be  found  only 
in  one  other  species  of  frog  from  this  region,  namely 
R.  lateralis.  It  turns  out  also  that  the  frog  recorded  and 
figured  by  Laidlaw  from  Kuala  Aring,  Kelantan  (P.Z.S., 
1900)  as  this  latter  species,  must  be  referred  to  miopus. 
Miss  Procter  has  kindly  examined  this  specimen,  now  in 
the  Museum  at  Cambridge  for  me,  and  confirms  my 
suspicions  as  to  its  identity. 

In  the  three  males  examined  by  me  the  canthus 
rostralis  is  distinct  ;  the  hind  limb  reaches  to  between 
the  nostril  and  the  eye  ;  the  skin  of  the  back  is  smooth 
in  one  and  more  or  less  studded  with  minute  horny 
tubercles  in  two. 

The  vocal  sacs  are  very  prominent,  appearing  as 
distended  pouches  through  a  slit  on  either  side  of  the  throat 
in  front  of  the  fore-arm.  They  have  a  large  fiat  oval  gland 
at  the  shoulder  and  a  thick  pad  on  the  inner  side  of  the 
first  finger. 

Colour.  Greyish-brown  above  and  on  the  side,  the 
glandular  dorsal  fold  not  darker  ;  a  dark  brown  patch 
enclosing  the  tympanum  ;  upper  lip  lightish  ;  the  limbs 
with  dark  bars  ;  a  series  of  fine  black  lines  running  oblicfuely 
downwards  from  left  to  right  between  the  dorso-laleral 
folds.     Below  yellowish-white. 

The  juvenile  from  Gunong  Tahan  is  coloured  pink,  like 
the  juvenile  from  the  type  locality. 

As  the  Kuala  Aring  specimen  is  the  only  record  of 
Rana  lateralis  in  the  Malay  Peninsula,  it  must  disappear 
from  the  fauna  of  this  region. 


*  Now  in  the  British  Museum  of  Natural  History. 


274 


Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 


Measurements  Of  R.  miopus,  in  mm. 


No. 

Snout  to  vent 

Length  of  head  - 

Breadth  of  head  - 

Snout 

Eye 

Interorbital  width 

Tympanum 

Arm 

1st  finger 

2nd      „ 

3rd       „ 

4th       „ 

Hind  limb 

Tibia 

Foot 


1210 
65 
23 
22 

9 

7 

4-5 

5 

39 
11 

8 
11 

75 
100 
32 
31 

Khao  Wang  Hip 
(P.  Siam), 


5911 
62 
21 
21 

9-5 

6-5 

5 

5 
40 
10-5 

9 
11 

8 

100 

33 

32 


5912 
63 
23 
22 
10 
■  7 
5 

55 

41 

10 

8 

11 

75 
103 
32 
^32 
G.  Tahan. 


Rana  nigrovittata   (Blyth). 
Bouleng.,  Rec.  Ind.  Mus.,  1920,  XX,  p.  144  ;  idem.  F.M.P.,  p.  242  ; 
Malcolm   Smith,  P.Z.S.,  1921,  p.  433  ;   idem.,  Journ.   N.H.S.   Siam, 
1922,  IV,  p.   212. 

One  example  from  Kuala  Teku  (No.  5927) . 

Boulenger  has  included  this  species  in  the  fauna  of  the 
Peninsula  on  the  strength  of  young  specimens  from  the 
Batu  Caves,  Selangor.  An  adult  $  obtained  at  Kuala  Teku, 
confirms  his  opinion. 

Colouration.  Brown  above,  with  a  broad  well  defined 
black  stripe  along  the  upper  half  of  the  flank. 

Rana  chalconota  Schlagel. 
Baiia  labialis,  F.M.P.,  p.  242. 

Rana  chalconota,  Bouleng.,  Rec.  Ind.  Mus,,  1920,  XX,  p.  201. 
Two  examples  from  Kuala  Teku. 

Rana  hosii  Bouleng. 
F.M.P.,  p.  243. 

One  adult  $  from  the  Tahan  river.     (No.  6036) . 

The  tibia  is  exactly  the  length  of  the  head  and  body, 
and  the  tibio-tarsal  articulation  reaches  well  beyond  the 
snout. 


1922]  Smith:   Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  2*75 

Rana  cataracta,  sp.  nov. 

Type  adult  male,  Author's  No.  6164,  collected  on  Khao 
Ram,  Nakon  Sritamarat  Hills,  Peninsular  Siam,  at  300 
metres  elevation,  in  Feb.  1922. 

Description  of  type.  Vomerine  teeth  in  moderately 
strong,  oblique  series,  commencing  between  the  choanae 
and  extending  beyond  their  posterior  borders,  equidistant 
from  each  other  and  from  the  choanae.  Head  a  little  longer 
than  broad,  much  depressed  ;  snout  obtusely  pointed, 
projecting  a  little  beyond  the  mouth.  Canthus  rostralis 
strong,  slightly  oblique,  deeply  concave  ;  nostril  nearer  the 
end  of  the  snout  than  the  eye  ;  distance  between  the  nostrils 
greater  than  the  interorbital  width,  which  is  less  than  that 
of  the  upper  eyelid  ;  eye  large  and  prominent,  its  diameter 
nearly  equal  to  the  length  of  the  snout  ;  tympanum  very 
distinct,  f  the  diameter  of  the  eye,  not  half  as  long  as  its 
distance  from  the  latter. 

Fingers  moderately  long,  the  tips  dilated  into  large 
discs,  those  of  the  third  and  fourth  considerably  smaller 
than  the  tympanum  ;  first  finger  slightly  shorter  than 
second,  third  longer  than  the  snout  ;  subarticular  tubercles 
large  and  prominent. 

Hind  limb  long,  the  tibio-farsal  articulation  reaching 
well  beyond  the  tip  of  the  snout  ;  heels  strongly  over- 
lapping when  the  limbs  arc  folded  at  right  angles  to  the 
body  ;  tibia  once  and  three-fifths  in  length  of  head  and  body, 
longer  than  the  foot  ;  a  feeble  tarsal  fold  ;  toes  with  discs 
similar  to  but  smaller  than  those  of  the  fingers,  fully 
webbed,  the  web  involving  the  bases  of  the  discs,  slightly 
emarginate  ;  outer  metatarsals  separated  to  the  base  ; 
subarticular  tubercles  moderately  large,  prominent  ;  inner 
metatSi'sal  tubercle  oval,  somewhat  flattened,  one-third  the 
length  of  the  inner  toe  ;  no  outer  tubercle. 

Upper  parts  finely  granulate  ;  coarsely  granulate  be- 
hind the  thighs  and  upon  the  sides  of  the  body,  the  latter 
also  with  numerous  small  warts  ;  lower  parts  smooth.  A 
moderately  broad  and  fairly  prominent  glandular  dorso- 
lateral fold  from  the  eye  to  the  hip. 

Colour.  Verdant  green  in  life  above,  greyish  in  spirits; 
sides  of  the  head  and  body  a  little  darker  ;  limbs  with 
indistinct  cross  bars  ;  upper  lip  and  the  glandule  behind 
it,  white.     Lower  parts  white. 

Vocal  vescicles  internal  ;  a  moderately  strong  pad  on 
the  first  finger.     No  other  sexual  characters. 

Variation.  21  specimens  examined,  1 1  5  3  $  ,  from 
the  type  locality,  4^    3$    from  Fraser's  Hill.     Except 


276  journal  of  the  F.M.S  Museums.         I  Vol.  X, 

for  some  slight  differences  in  measurements,  the  males  do 
not  differ  in  any  important  character  from  the  type 
specimen  except  in  having  a  more  prominent,  glandular 
dorso-lateral  fold.     Females  arc  considerably  larger. 

Two  of  the  males  (Nos.  6532,  6534)  from  Eraser's 
Hill  are  coloured  as  follows  : — Bright  green  on  the  back, 
sides  of  body  and  limbs  above  brown,  the  latter  with  darkish 
crossbars  ;  below  white.  Two  females  from  the  same 
locality  (Nos.  6535-6)  are  purplish  brown  above  and  on 
the  sides  ;  below  whitish,  the  throat,  chest  and  under  surface 
of  limbs  heavily  powdered  with  brown. 

Eggs  large  and  unpigmented,  2-5  mm.  in  diameter. 

Rana  cataracta  is  closely  allied  to  R.  hosii  Blgr.,  and 
R.  livida  (Blyth)  .*  From  the  former  it  differs  in  the  larger 
tympanum,  more  coarsely  granulate  skin,  and  very 
distinctly  in  colouration.  From  the  male  of  R.  livida,  with 
its  prominent  bladder-like  external  vocal  vescicles,  it  is 
easily  distinguished.  The  females  of  the  two,  except  for 
some  slight  differences  in  colouration  appear  to  be 
indistinguishable  from  each  other. 

From  R.  chalconata  (Schleg.)  another  near  ally  which 
agrees  exactly  with  it  in  colouration,  and  which  was  found 
in  company  with  it  on  Khao  Bam,  it  differs  in  the  longer 
hind  limb,  more  fully  webbed  toes  and  in  the  absence  of 
the  small  external  metatarsal  tubercle. 

Remarks.  This  new  frog  was  first  discovered  on  Khao 
Ram,  on  the  banks  of  a  stream  famous  for  its  scries  of 
magnificent  waterfalls.  It  was  common  at  300  metres 
altitude,  at  a  couple  of  large  pools  where  we  were  camped 
for  some  days,  but  was  not  found  on  two  other  hills  in  the 
same  range  visited  on  the  same  trip. 

Its  habits  were  those  of  a  true  tree  frog,  perching  high 
up  in  bushes,  or  on  the  trunks  of  trees,  or  hopping  about 
on  the  rocks  beside  the  swiftly  flowing  water.  The  call  of 
the  male,  heard  at  night  only,  was  a  short  whistling  cry, 
sometimes  almost  a  scream,  and  by  it  they  could  be  tracked 
down  with  a  lantern  and  caught. 

The  Rami  livida  obtained  by  Wray  in  the  Larut  Hills, 
Perak,  should  possibly  be  referred  to  this  species. 


*  Also  to  /?.  graminea,  Blgr.,  which  appears  to  differ  from 
livida  chiefly  in  the  presence  of  a  more  or  less  defined  glandular 
dorso-lateral  fold.  Originally  described  from  Hainan,  this  frog 
has  since  been  found  to  be  widely  spread  over  Siam  and  Indo- 
China.    I  strongly  suspect  the  two  will  have  to  be  united. 


1922]  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  277 

Measurements  of  R.  cataracta,  from  Khao  Ram,  in  mm. 

Type. 
No.       -  -  6169  6160  6163  6162  6164  6165  6166  6170  6186  6187 


Snout  to  vent 

50 

53 

54 

57 

53 

55 

51 

50 

86 

86 

Length  of  head 

18 

20 

20 

20 

18 

21 

19 

18 

29 

29 

Breadth  of  head 

16 

17 

17 

18 

16 

19 

17 

16 

29 

27 

Snout   - 

8 

8 

85 

85 

8 

9 

75 

7 

13 

135 

Eye      - 

6 

8 

7 

7 

75 

8 

75 

75 

10 

10 

Interorbital     - 

4 

45 

45 

5 

4 

5 

4 

45 

75 

8 

Tympanum 

4 

45 

45 

4 

4 

45 

4 

4-5 

45 

45 

Fore  limb 

31 

37 

35 

38 

35 

37 

34 

32 

57 

55 

Hind  limb 

92 

98 

99 

110 

98 

35 

97 

91 

148 

150 

Tibia    - 

32 

32 

35 

37 

34 

34 

32 

32 

52 

53 

Foot     - 

27 

29 

28 

31 

29 

31 

28 

28 

48 

46 

Sex      - 

S 

c? 

^ 

c? 

<S 

^ 

6 

cT 

? 

? 

Measurements  of  Specimens  from  Eraser's  Hill. 
No.          -  -  -    6531     6532    6533    6534    6535    6536    6600 


Snout  to  vent   - 

-      49 

50 

48 

46 

95 

98 

104 

Length  of  head 

-      19 

19 

18 

16 

32 

34 

35 

Breadth  of  head 

-      16 

16 

16 

14 

31 

31 

34 

Snout 

8 

8 

7-5 

7 

14 

16 

17 

Eye 

7 

65 

7 

55 

11 

105 

12 

Interorbital   width 

4 

4 

45 

4 

95 

9 

10 

Tympanum 

4 

4 

4 

3-5 

6 

6-5 

55 

Fore  limb 

-      30 

33 

30 

30 

64 

67 

69 

Hind  limb 

-      89 

86 

90 

89 

180 

186 

198 

Tibia      - 

-      30 

32 

30 

32 

62 

67 

70 

Foot 

-      25 

27 

26 

27 

52 

56 

61 

Sex         -  -  -       c?         c^         c?         d'         ?         ?         ? 

Type  to  the  British  Museum  of  Natural  History. 

Rana  larutensis  Boiileng. 

Eana  larutensist  F.M.P.,  p.  245. 

Staurois  larutensis,  Bouleng.,  Ann.  Mag.  Nat.  Hist.  (9)  1,  1918, 
p.  374. 

Six  examples,  Padang,  Gunong  Tahan  and  Kuala  Teku  ; 
four  examples,  Eraser's  Hill 

The  largest  9  is  75  mm.,  from  snout  to  vent,  the 
largest  $  44  mm.  Another  $  ,  70  mm.  in  length,  taken 
in  December,  contained  about  800  eggs,  unpigmented,  each 
measuring  from  1-75  to  2  mm.  in  diameter.  Several 
tadpoles  with  fully  developed  limbs  and  diminishing  tail, 
but  with  the  large  ventral  sucker  still  complete  were  taken 
at  the  same  time. 


278  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.X, 

The  amount  of  black  blotching  upon  the  upper  parts 
of  the  frog  is  variable,  and  may  be  so  extensive  as  almost  to 
obscure  the  green.  Some  specimens  have  the  throat  and 
under  surfaces  of  the  thighs  heavily  marked  with  black  also. 

The  male  has  vocal  vescicles  fairly  well  marked 
externally,  the  skin  on  either  side  of  the  jaw  being  thinned 
and  thrown  into  longitudinal  folds. 

Rhacophorus  leucomystax   (Gravenh.). 

F.M.P.,  p.  248. 

Three  examples  from  Kuala  Tahan  and  many  from 
Eraser's  Hill.  In  some  of  these  the  tibio-tarsal  articula- 
tion reaches  the  tip  of  the  snout,  in  others  well  beyoncj. 
The  hind  leg  of  this  common  tree-frog  varies  greatly 
in  length,  and  in  the  large  series  in  my  possession  from 
Siam  and  Indo-China,  the  tibio-tarsal  articulation  reaches 
beyond  the  snout  in  more  than  half  of  them.  Philippine 
examples  evidently  do  the  same  (cf.  Taylor,  Philippine 
Amphibia,  1920,  p.  289). 

Rhacophorus  bimaculatus  Bouleng. 

F.M.P.,  p.  250. 

13  exs.  Bukit  Fraser. 

This  tree-frog  is  very  closely  allied  to  R.  reinwardti 
Boie,  and  I  doubt  if  it  should  really  be  considered  specifi- 
cally distinct.  I  have  compared  the  above  examples, 
and  24  more  from  Khao  Luang  in  the  Nakon  Sritamarat 
Hills,  Peninsular  Siam  (unfortunately,  only  one  more  than 
half  grown)  with  4  specimens  of  typical  reinwardti  from 
Java.  None  of  the  differences  claimed  by  Boulenger  for 
them  will  stand. 

The  vomerine  teeth  may  be  in  slightly  oblique  series 
or  perfectly  straight.  The  cutaneous  folds  above  the  vent 
along  the  sides  of  the  arms  and  legs  may  be  slightly  or 
strongly  developed.  No  black  spots  are  present  on  the 
membrane  between  the  fingers  and  toes  of  the  Siamese 
examples,  but  are  present  in  half  the  series  from  the 
Malay  Peninsula. 

The  character  in  which  the  two  forms  however  do 
consistently  differ  is  in  the  size  of  the  discs  of,  and  extent 
of  the  web  between,  the  fingers  and  toes.  In  reinwardti 
the  finger  discs  are  always  larger  than  the  tympanum  and 
the  membrane  is  fuller,  usually  extending  to  the  disc  of 
the  third  finger.  In  bimaculatus  the  discs  are  not  larger, 
and  often  smaller,  than  the  tympanum,  and  the  web  never 
reaches  the  disc  of  the  third  finger. 

In  addition  the  membrane  of  both  fingers  and  toes 
in  reinwardti  are  wider,  allowing  a  more  complete 
separation  of  the  digits.  Thus  when  the  fingers  of  this 
frog  are  fully  extended,  the  first  and  fourth  form  a  straight 


1922]  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  279 

line;  in  bimaculatus  they  make  an  obtuse  angle.  The 
external  metatarsals  are  completely  separated  in  rein- 
wardti,  in  bimaculatus  not  completely. 

Tadpoles  taken  on  Fraser's  Hill  and  bred  out  by  me 
agree  entirely  with  van  Kampen's  description  of  the  tad- 
pole of  reinwardti  (Nat.  Tijd.  Ned.  Ind.,  LXIX.,  1909, 
p.  43). 

The  colouration  of  R.  bimaculatus  in  life  shews 
considerable  variation,  the  upper  parts  ranging  through 
various  shades  of  green,  grey,  pink  or  brown,  usually 
uniform  but  sometimes  with  an  indistinct  dark)  (upon 
the  back.  Below  dull  yellow  the  membrane  between  the 
fingers  yellow,  between  the  toes  red  or  orange,  this 
colour  sometimes  including  the  upper  arm,  flanks  and 
a  band  along  the  thighs.  Very  young  specimens  are 
light  brownish-green  above,  with  a  white  throat  and  belly 
and  yellow  limbs. 

R.  reinwardti  appears  to  have  accomodated  itself  to 
more  lowland  conditions,  thriving  at  Buitenzorg,  altitude 
250  m.,  while  R.  bimaculatus  as  far  as  the  Malay  Peninsula 
and  Siam  is  concerned  has  not  been  found  below  700  m. 

Philautus  brevipes  (Bouleng.). 

Ixaliis  brevipes,  Bouleng,  Journ.  F.M.S.  Mus.  III.,  1908,  p.  63, 
pi.  IV.,  fig.  1;  F.M.P.,  p.  253. 

A  fine  series  of  16  specimens  of  this  little  tree-frog, 
hitherto  known  only  from  a  single  example.  (Nos.  5970 
and  6007  to  6021),  One  was  taken  by  Mr.  Chasen  at  Kuala 
Teku  on  a  broad  leaf  overhanging  the  water,  the  remainder 
are  from  Camp  Padang.  The  type  was  obtained  by  Mr. 
Robinson  on  Gunong  Tahan  at  1,000  metres. 

The  series  agrees  well  with  the  description.  The  tibio- 
tarsal  articulation  may  reach  to  the  anterior  border  of  the 
eye.  The  tympanum  varies  in  distinctness,  and  is  always 
smaller  than  the  disc  of  the  third  finger.  The  skin  of  the 
back  is  smooth  in  some,  finely  shagreened  in  others. 

As  is  common  with  many  species  of  Philautus  the 
colour  is  variable.  About  half  the  scries  shew  the  dark 
patch  on  the  back,  more  or  less  as  figured  in  the  description 
of  the  type.  In  others  the  back  is  uniformly  but  coarsely 
speckled  with  black  all  over.  Some  have  no  dark  bars  to 
the  Ihnbs.  Greyish  olive  is  the  predominating  colour  above, 
except  in  one  example  which  is  reddish  brown. 

The  example  from  Kuala  Teku  (No.  5970)  is  pale  grey 
above  (under  the  glass  dark  grey  finely  vermiculated  with 
buff),  and  with  a  broad  irregular  buff  band  along  either 
side  of  the  back.  This  specimen,  the  largest,  measures  36 
mm^  from  snout  to  vent. 

Several  of  the  females  contain  ripe  ova,  the  eggs  being 
large,  few  and  pigmented.     Diameter  2  mm; 
5 


280  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

Philautus  castanomerus   (Bouleng.). 
Ixalus  castanomerus,  Bouleng.,  Journ.  F.M.S.  Mus.,  I.,  1905, 
p.  39,  pi.  IV.,  fig.  1;  F.M.P.,  p.  254. 

One  example,  Kuala  Teku  (No.  5929)  ;  one  example 
Wray's  Camp  (No.  5930). 

Boulenger's  description,  drawn  up  from  a  single 
example,  agrees  entirely  with  these  two  specimens  except 
in  colouration,  a  point  of  little  significance  with  many  of 
the  members  of  this  genus,  so  greatly  may  they  vary  both 
in  colouration  and  in  markings. 

No.  5930  has  the  snout  obliquely  pointed  as  in  the 
figure,  the  other,  a  larger  one,  has  it  more  acutely  pointed 
owing  to  the  presence  of  a  distinct  dermal  tip. 

Both  specimens  are  dark  brown  colour  above,  the 
smaller  one  uniform,  the  larger  with  indistinct  paler 
mottlings  and  indications  of  a  dark  X  ;  below  pale  yellowish- 
brown,  heavily  spotted  with  dark  brown. 

Boulenger  has  compared  this  species  with  his 
P.  vermiculatus  ;  1  can  find  nothing,  however,  except 
colouration  and  a  slightly  narrower  interorbital  region,  to 
separate  it  from  the  Javan  P.  aurifasciatus  Schlegel,  with 
a  specimen  of  which  I  have  compared  it. 

Kalophrynus  robinsoni,  sp.  nov. 

Type,  author's  number  5935,  collected  at  Wray's  Camp 
in  Oct.  1920  ;  presented  to  the  British  Museum. 

Description  of  the  type.  Tongue  elliptic,  entire. 
Snout  short,  truncate,  projecting  slightly  beyond  the 
mouth  ;  canthus  rostralis  distinct,  loreal  region  vertical, 
feebly  concave  ;  interorbital  region  broader  than  the  upper 
eyelid  ;  tympanum  distinct,  two-thirds  the  diameter  of  the 
eye.  First  and  second  fingers  very  short,  not  half  the  length 
of  the  third,  fourth  shorter  still  ;  toes  one-third  webbed, 
the  web  extending  as  a  fringe  along  the  outer  sides  of  the 
toes  ;  fifth  toe  shorter  than  the  third  ;  tips  of  fingers  and 
toes  bluntly  pointed  ;  a  feebly  developed  oval  inner 
metatarsal  tubercle  and  a  rounded  outer  one.  The  tibio- 
tarsal  articulation  reaches  the  tympanum. 

Skin  of  the  back  granular,  with  small  scattered 
tubercles  ;  a  series  of  tubercles  along  the  dorso-lateral 
region  from  the  eye  to  the  groin  ;  belly  and  groin  with 
large,  coarse  granules  ;  throat  with  finer  granules  ;  a 
curved  fold  from  the  eye  to  the  shoulder. 

Light  brown  above  with  dark  brown  markings,  in 
particular  a  large  one  on  the  back  extending  forwards  in 
two  branches  to  the  eyelids,  and  backwards,  in  two  longer 
branches  to  the  groins  ;  sides  of  head  and  body  very  dark 
brown,  this  colour  sharply  defined  from  the  light  brown 


1922]  Smith:  Reptiles  and  Batrachians.  281 

of  the  back  ;  limbs  with  dark  cross  bars,  and  a  dark  patch 
enclosing  the  vent  and  extending  along  the  back  of  the 
thighs.     Below  yellowish,  spotted  and  speckled  with  brown. 

From  snout  to  vent  17  mm. 

Variation.  Five  examples  from  the  type  locality 
(author's  numbers  5934  to  5938  inclusive)  and  one  more 
from  Kuala  Teku  (5942)  do  not  show  much  variation  from 
the  type  specimen.  The  tympanum  is  not  so  distinct  in 
two  examples  ;  in  one  the  series  of  tubercles  along  the 
doso-lateral  region  is  very  conspicuous,  and  there  is  in 
addition  another  series  along  the  hinder  side  of  each  thigh 
as  in  K.  pleuro stigma.  Two  specimens  have  a  pink  tinge 
upon  the  upper  parts  ;  the  dark  forked  mark  on  the  back 
varies  considerably  both  in  extent  and  shape. 

Kalophrynus  robinsoni  is  related  to  K.  heterochirus 
Boulenger,  from  Borneo,  from  which  it  differs  in  the 
shorter  hind  limb,  shorter  third  finger,  the  strongly 
tubercular  skin  and  distinctive  colouration.^ 

The  specimens  here  described  are  evidently  very 
young.  Their  characters  however  are  quite  distinct 
The  dermal  ridge  across  the  palate  behind  the  choanae 
it  obtusely  V  shaped  and  interrupted  in  the  mid-line,  as  in 
K.  pleiirostigma  ;  the  ridge  in  front  of  the  oesophagus  is 
pronounced  and  strongly  denticulate,  while  the  one  anterior 
to  it  is  curved  and  less  strongly  denticulate.  Boulenger's 
figure  of  K.  pleurostigma  in  F.M.P.,  257,  represents  the 
anterior  ridge  as  a  continuous  curve.  In  22  specimens  in 
my  collection  from  various  parts  of  Siam  and  Indo-China, 
it  is  in  each  one  interrupted  in  the  mid-line  for  some 
distance.  Miss  Procter  informs  me  that  the  palatal  ridge 
of  K.  heterochirus  is  almost  straight,  and  is  just  inter- 
rupted in  the  middle. 

Microhyla  butleri  Bouleng. 
F.M.P.,  p.  261. 

One  juvenile  from  Kuala  Teku  ;  four  adults  from 
Eraser's  Hill. 

Recently  also  I  have  examined  a  specimen  frorn  the 
He-Ho  plain,  Southern  Shan  States,  Burma,  sent  me  by  Dr. 
Anandale ;  a  considerable  extension  of  the  known 
geographical  range  of  this  frog. 

Microhyla  berdmorei  (Blyth). 
F.M.P.,  p.,  263. 

Two  juveniles,  one  from  Kuala  Teku,  the  other  of 
unknown  origin — the  label  being  lost.  It  is  certainly 
however  from  somewhere  on  this  mountain. 

This  specimen  a  $  (No.  6050)  is  somewhat  remarkable, 
in  that  although  only  17  mm.  in  length  from  snout  to  vent 

1.  Kindly  compared  for  me  by  Miss  Procter  with  the  type 
specimen,  now  in  the  British  Museum. 

6 


282  Journal  of  the  F.M.S.  Museums.         [Vol.  X, 

it  is  filled  with  ripe  ova.     In  every  character  however  it 
agrees  with  M.  berdmorei. 

Kaloula  baleata  (Miiller). 
CaUiila  baleata,  Bouleng.,  Cat.  Batr.  Sal.,  1882,  p.  169. 
Kaloula  baleata,  Barbour,  Mem.  Mus.  Comp.  Zool.  (1912),  XLIV, 
(1)   p.  72. 

One  adult  $  (No.  5928)  with  ripe  ova  collected  at  Kuala 
Tahan,  in  January.  This  is  the  first  record  of  this  burrow- 
ing frog  from  the  mainland  of  Asia,  although  it  is  well 
known  in  the  Archipelago. 

Phrynella  pulchra  Bouleng. 
F.M.P.,  p.   265. 

A  male  and  female  taken  in  copula  in  September  at 
Kuala  Tahan  (Nos.  5931,  5932).  They  were  caught  in  the 
bottom  of  a  boat  in  a  pool  of  water  that  had  collected  there 
from  a  storm  of  the  previous  night.  Eggs  large  and 
pigmented,  the  vitelline  sphere  measures  1*5  mm.  in 
diameter.  The  male  has  the  pad  at  the  base  of  the  first 
finger  slightly  larger  than  that  of  the  female,  but  there 
are  no  other  characters  separating  the  sexes. 

Bufo  jerboa  Bouleng. 
F.M.P.,  p.  271. 

One  half -grown  example  of  this  toad  from  Kuala 
Teku. 

Bufo  penangensis  Stol. 
F.M.P.,  p.  270. 

One  example  Kuala  Teku.  Two  examples  Eraser's 
Hill. 

The  Bukit  Eraser  examples  have  dull  white  markings 
instead  of  the  usual  yellow  ones. 

Bufo  parvus  Bouleng. 

Two  examples  Kuala  Tahan. 

Bufo  asper  Gravenh. 

Apparently  common  in  most  localities  up  to  1,500 
metres. 

Megalophrys  nasuta  Cantor. 

One  example  Wray's  camp.     No.  4947. 

Megalophrys  longipes  Bouleng. 
Bouleng.  P.Z.S.,  1908,  p.  415. 

One-hailf  grown  example  from  Eraser's  Hill. 
[Rana  pullus  Smith  (antea  p.  197)  is  preoccupied  by 
Rana  pullus  Stoliczka  (Journ.  Asiat.  Soc.  Bengal  XXXIX 
1870,  p.  142)  and  the  frog  from  Chumporn  may  therefore 
be  known  as  Rana  tasanae  (cf .  Journ.  Nat.  Hist.  Soc.  Siam, 
VI,  1921,  p.  193)1. 


1922]       Pendlebury:  A  New  Malayan  Butterfly.  283 

XXI.     A    BUTTERFLY    NEW    TO    THE    MALAY 
PENINSULA. 

By  H.  M.  Pendlebury,  F.E.S. 
Systematic  Entomologist,  F.M.S.  Museums. 

Amongst  some  insects  recently  obtained  in  the  Main 
Range  north  of  Gunong  Berumbun  is  a  butterfly  of  a 
species  not  yet  recorded  from  further  south  than 
Tenasserim  : — 

FAMILY    NYMPHALIDAE. 

Sub-family  Satyr inae. 

Lethe  verma  Koll. 

Lethe  verma  Fruhst.  in  Seitz'  Macrolepidoptera,  IX,  p.  324; 
Bingham,  Fauna  of  British  India,  Butterflies  I.,  p.  84. 

$  ,  Lubok  Tamang,  Pahang,  F.M.S.,  4,000  feet,  Sept. 
8th  1922.    Native  Collector. 

This  individual  which  has  an  expanse  of  68  mm.,  the 
prominent  ochreus-white  oblique  discal  band  on  the  fore- 
wings  beings  7  mm.  broad  in  the  middle,  comes  nearest 
to  the  wet-season  form  L.  V.  sintica  which,  according  to 
Fruhstorfer  "  .  . .  .  presents  very  definitely  the  aspect 
associated  with  a  rainy  district  ;  compared  with  verma 
from  the  dry  West  of  the  region."  L.  v.  stenopa  Fruhst., 
recorded  from  Tenasserim,  "....  shows  a  reversion  to- 
wards verma  ;  comes  likewise  from  districts  with  a  small 
rainfall  and  hence  again  with  predominantly  dry-season 
facies." 

Previously  recorded  from  N.-W.  and  E.  Himalayas  ; 
Assam  ;  Khasia  Hills  ;  Burma  and  Tenasserim. 

Fruhstorfer,  I.e.,  places  this  species  under  group 
Hermias,  Fruhst.  and  records  six  subspecies  as  follows: — 

L.    V.    verma    Koll.    Common    in    Kashmir    and 
Mussurie. 

L.  V.  sintica  Fruhst.  Sikkim  and  Assam. 

L.  V.  stenopa  Fruhst.  Tonking,  Hainan,  Shan  States 
and  Tenasserim. 

L.  V.  laticincta  Fruhst.  Wet  season  form,  China. 

L.  V.  cinctomani  Fruhst.  Melanotic  island  extreme, 
Formosa. 

L.  V.  satarnus  Fruhst.  Mountain  form,  Omeishan, 
W.  China. 


INDEX. 


A.    ZOOLOGY. 


Page 
aagaardi,      Hydrophis      tor- 

quatus  14,  42 

Accipiter    virgatus     gularis 

254,  256,  260 
Acroccphalus  orientalis  .  .  255 
algyptus  singapura,  Eiiploea  189 
aelia,  Eiiploea  simillinia  .  .  191 
aenetheta,  Sterna  .  .   25.'^ 

affinis  artenicc,  Danaida     .  .    178 
inalayana       Danaida   177 
aglea  nielanoides,  Danaida  .  .    170 
Aipysurus    eydouxii  32,  63 

albata,    Danaida    albata      .  .    168 
albirictis,    Dicrurus    macro- 

cercus  . .    207 

alboniger,  Spizaetus  ..   211 

alcatlfbe   gardineri,   Euploea    183 
monticola,  Euploea  183 
Alcedo  atthis  bengalensis   .  .    256 
Alseonax   latirostris  254,  260 

Amaurornis  phoenicura  chi- 

nensis  253,  259 

anak,    Cyornis  .  .   261 

andanianensis,   (^orvus   coro- 
noides  .  .    223 

annandalei,    Thalassophis   29,  59 

annectens,   Dicrurus  .  .    260 

anomalus,  Thalassophis       29,  58 

Anous   stolidus  pileatus      .  .   260 

Aplonis  panayenis   strigata      259 

archippus,   Danaida  .  .    173 

Arctonyx  collaris  hoeveni  .  .   236 

Ardetta    sinensis  .  .   254 

anustrongi,  Halcyon  chloris  214 

artenice,   Danaida   affinis    .  .    178 

aspasia  aspasia,  Danaida    .  .    171 

asper,  Bufo  .  .   282 

Astur  badius  poliopsis         .  .    256 

soloensis  256, 260 

atriceps,  Hydrophis  atriceps 

25,  53 
atrocaudata,  Terpsiphone  254,  260 

A 


Page 
atthis  bengalensis,  Alcedo  . .   256 

australis,         Drvniocataphus 
tickelli  '  .  .    205 

badius   poliopsis,   Astur      .  .   256 

baleata,  Kalloula  264,282 

Balionycteris    maculata    sei- 
mundi  .  .   229 

banksi  banks!,  Danoida       .  .    167 

baraniensis,  Tropidonotus  .  .    199 

barang  barang,  Lutra  .  .    238 

barussana,   Malacocincla    se- 
piaria  .  .   205 

bataviana,  Danaida  chrysip- 
pus  ..173 

bengalensis,     Alcedo     atthis  256 

berdmorei,  Microhyla  .  .  281 

besuki,  Sciurus  nigrovittatus  231 

bicolor,  Myristicivora       256,  259 

biniaculatus,  Rhacophorus  278 

bisincta  praetennissa,  Treron  203 

boarula   iiielanope,  Motacilla  259 
borealis     borealis,     Phvllos- 

copus  255,'  258,  260 

borneana,  Chalcoparia  singa- 
lensis  .  .   209 

borneensis,    Eupeles    niacro- 
cercus  .  .   204 

(lonyocephalus    268 

Macropvgia  emi- 
liana  .  .   203 

Brachylophus  puniceus  con- 
tinentis  .  .   204 

brevirostris,    Chibia    hotten- 

totta  .  .   223 

brevipes,  Philautus  .  .    279 

l)rugmannsi,  Hydrophis       12,  40 

Bufo  asper  . .    282 

jerboa  . .   282 

pai-vus  .  .   282 

penangensis  .  .   282 

bukit    tenimincki,    Rattus    .  .    233 

])utleri,  Lygosonia  .  .    270 

Microhyla  .  .   281 

Bulorides  javanica       .  .   253,  259 


Index. — Zoology. 


Page 
caerulescens,  Hydrophis  cae- 
rulescens  17,  45 

caesia,  Philentoma  velata  217 
Calamaria  pavimentata  .  .  267 
Caloenas  nicobarica  256,  259 
Calotes   cristatellus  .  .   269 

floweri  . .   269 

Caprimulgus    indicus   jotaka 

254,  257,  260 

castanomerus,  Philautus     .  .   280 

cataracta,   Rana  264,  275 

cathoecus,   Dicrurus    macro- 

cercus  . .   207 

certhiola,  Locustella  . .   255 

Ceyx  tridactyla  254,  257 

chalconota,  Rana  .  .    274 

Chalcoparia    singalensis 

borneana       209 

interposita    209 

koratensis     208 

phoenicotis  210 

singalensis    209 

suniatrana    209 

Chalcophaps    indica  .  .    25G 

Chelidon    dasypus  253,  255 

chersonesia,  Hcstia  leuconoe  101 

chersonesus,   Chrysocolaptes 

strict  us  .  .   217 

Chibia  hottentotta  221,  222 

brevirostris  223 

chrishna 

222,  223 

chinensis,      Amaurornis 

phoenicura  253, 259 

chloris  armstrongi.  Halcyon  214 

cvanoscens,       Halc- 
yon 214,  215 
humii,  Halcyon  214,257 
palmeri.       Halcyon 

214,  215 
chrishna,  Chibia   hottentotta 

222,  223 

Ghitra   indica  .  .   264 

chrysargus,  Natrix  .  .    265 

chrysippus     bataviana,     Da- 

naida  .  .    173 

Chrysocolaptes  strictus  cher- 
sonesus .  .   217 

Cichloselys  sibirica  davisoni 

254,  258,  260 

cinerea,  Terekia  , .   253 


Page 

cinereus,  Pericrocotus      254,  258 

climena  '  sepulchralis,    Eup- 
loea  . .    181 

coccometopus,      Heniicercus 

concretus  .  .  212 

Coccystes   coromandus        .  .  254 

collaris     hoeveni,     Arctonyx  236 

Polyodontophis 

264,  265 

Collocalia   innoniinata         .  .   254 
Coluber  oxycephalus  .  .   266 

prasinus  264,  266 

conii)iIator,  Corvus  enca  .  .  228 
concretus  coccometopus,  He- 
niicercus .  .  212 
conica  contracta,  Pachylabra  193 
consobrinus,  Hydrophis  20,  49 
contineutis,       Brachylophus 

puniceus  .  .   204 

contracta,  Pachylabra  conica  193 
cophias,  Lygosonia  .  .   270 

core   graniinifera,   Euploea      182 
coromanda  coronianda,  Hal- 
cyon 215,216,254,260 
minor.  Halcyon       216 
neophora,        Hal- 


cyon 

216 

coromandus,    Coccystes 

254 

coronoides        andamanensis. 

(Corvus 

223 

coronoides,   Corvus 

223 

macrorhynchus, 

Corvus 

224 

corns  phoebus,  Euploea 

187 

Corvus  coronoides 

223 

andaman- 

ensis 

223 

macror- 

hynchus 

224 

enca  compilator 

228 

enca 

228 

crameri    marsdeni,    Euploea 

179 

snelleni,  Euploea 

180 

crassa  crassa,  Euploea 

190 

cristatellus,    Calotes 

269 

cristatus,  Lanius 

255 

crowleyi,   Daiiaida 

168 

Cryplolopha   trivirgata 

218 

kinabaluense 

219 

parvirostris 

219 

Index. — Zoolo(.y, 


iii 


Page 
Cuculus  micropterus  254,  257,  260 
culminata,  Lalage  fimbriata  219 
cumatilis,  Cyanoptila  cyano- 

mclana      "  254, 258, 260 

cyanea,    LarvivOra  255,  260 

cvanescens.  Halcyon  chloris 

214,  215 
cyanocinctus,  Hydrophis       8,  37 
cyanomelana  cumatilis,  Cya- 
noptila 254,  258,  260 
cyanoptera.  Pitta        254,  257,  260 
Cyanoptila  cyanomelana  cu- 
matilis 254,  258,  260 
Cyornis  anak  .  .   261 
elegans  .  .   212 
Gyrtostomus  ornatus  ornatus  259 
Danaida    affinis    artenice    . .    178 
malayana      177 
aglea    melanoides      170 
albata   albata        . .    168 
archippus  .  .    173 
aspasia  aspasia    .  .    171 
banksi   banksi      ..   167 

chrysippus       bata- 
viana  .  .   173 

crowleyi  . .  168 

eryx  eryx  . .  169 

juventa  krakatauae  166 

juventa  sitah        .  .  165 

lininiace    limniacc  172 

lotis  lotis  .  .  178 

luzoncnsis       prae- 

macaristus  .  .  169 
melaneus   platanis- 

ton  .  .  166 

melanippus     hege- 

sippus  .  .  176 

insularis  .  .    176 

melissa  septentrio- 
nis  . .    172 

plexippus  intcnsa  175 

plexippus   175 

similis  vulgaris   .  .    164 

sita  ethologa         ,  .    168 

tityoides  .  .    168 

daos  perakana,  Ideopsis     .  .    162 

dasypus,   Chelidon  253,  255 

dauma,  Oreocincla  255,  258 

davisoni,  Cichloselvs  sibirica 

254,258,260 


Page 
deheeri  lamos,  Euploea  . .  182 
deione  mcnetriesi,  Euploea  184 
dejeani,  Euploea  midamus  .  .  189 
Demiegretta    sacra  256,  259 

Dendrophis  pictus  .  .    266 

dicruroides,    Surniculus    lu- 

gubris  .  .   254 

Dicrurus  annectens  .  .   260 

macrocercus    albi- 
rictes  . .   207 

cathoecus  . .  207 
harterti  .  .    207 

javanus  207, 208 
macrocercus  207 
thai  207, 208 

diocletianus         diocletianus, 

Euploea  .  •    190 

Doliophis   intestinalis  .  .   267 

doriae,  Rana  . .   271 

Draco   fimbriatus  .  .   268 

formosus  .  .   268 

volans  .  .   268 

Drymocataphus  tickelli  aus- 

Iralis  .  .   205 

dufresne  harrisi,  Euploea  . .   185 
dumerilii,    Varanus  .  .   269 

Dupetor  llavicollis     254,256,259 
elegans,  Cyornis  .  .   212 

eleusina    eleusina,   Euploea      191 
emiliana     borneensis,     Mac- 

ropygia  .  .    203 

enca  compilator,  Corvus     .  .    228 
enca,  Corvus  .  .   228 

Enhydris  hardwickii  32,  61 

Enhydrina  valakadyn  30,  60 

Entomothera    coromanda    .  .    215 
eryx  eryx,  Danaida  . .   169 

ethologa,  Danaida  sita         .  .    168 
Eudvnamis    scolopacea    ma- 
layana 257,  260 
Eupetes     macrocercus     bor- 
neensis .  .   204 
macrocercus        212 
Euploea  aegyptus  singapura  189 
alcathoe  gardineri     183 
inonticola    183 
climenasepulchralis  181 
crameri   marsdeni     179 
snelleni        180 


VI 


Index. — Zoology. 


Page 
lateralis,  Macrocalamiis  .  .  266 
laticeps,  Rana  .  .   271 

latirostris,  Alseonax  254,  260 

layardi,   Euploea  .  .    183 

ledereri,  Euploea  mazares       187 
Lethe  verma  .  .   283 

leucobalia,  Fordonia  . .   201 

leucogonys,  Euploea  Icucos- 

tictos  .  .    188 

leucomystax,  Rhacophorus  278 
leuconoe  chersonesia,  Hestia  161 
leucostictos  leucogonys,  Eup- 
loea .  .  188 
limniace  limniace,  Danaida  172 
Linionites  subminuta  .  .  253 
lineata,  Hestia  hypermnestra  161 
Locustella  certhiola  .  .  255 
lanceolata  255,258,  260 
logani  logani,  Hestia  160 
longipcs,  Megalophrys  282 
longiceps,  Pseudorhabdiuiii  267 
lotis  lotis,  Danaida  .  .  178 
luciae  sianiensis,  Otus  .  .  261 
luctuosa,  Rana  .  .  273 
lugubris  dicruroides,  Surni- 
culus                                     . .   254 

subsp.,  Surniculus    257 
Lutra  barang  barang  . .   238 

luzonensis      praemacaristus, 

Danaida  .  .    169 

Lygosoma   butleri  .  .   270 

cophias  .  .   270 

indicuni  264,  270 

larutense  .  .   271 

olivaceum  .  .   270 

vittigerum  .  .   270 

lynceus  reinwardti,  Hestia  .  .    160 

Mabuia    niultifasciata  .  .   269 

Macrocalamus    lateralis     ,.  .   266 

macrocercus  borneensis, 

Eupetes  .  .   204 

macrocercus,  Dicrurus  207 

Eupetes  212 

thai,  Dicrurus         207,208 

uiacrodon,    Rana  .  .   272 

macrorhynchus,  Corvus 

coronoides  .  .   224 

Macropisthodon   rhodomelas  265 

tlaviceps    .  .   266 


Page 
Macropygia     emiliana     bor- 
neensis .  .   203 
niaculata  seimundi,  Balionyc- 

teris  .  .    229 

niaculatus        septcntrionalis, 

Prionochilus  .  .    206 

malabarica   interposita,    Kit- 
tacincla  .  .   262 

javana,  Kittacincla  210 
oinissa,Kittacincla  211 
tricolor,  Kittacin- 
cla .  .    211 
Malacocincla  sepiaria  barus- 
sana  .  .   205 
minor        220, 221 
sepiaria     220, 221 
malayana,  Danaida   afTinis       177 
Eudynamis  scolo- 

pacea  257, 260 

Otus  scops        254,  260 

nialayica   malayica,   Euploea  180 

niarmoratus,  Gymnodactylus  268 

179 
191 
218 
187 
282 
282 


marsdeni,  Euploea  cramer 
martini,   Euploea 
maxwelli,  Philentoma 
mazares  ledereri,  Euploea 
Megalophrys  longipes 

nasuta 

melaneusplataniston,  Danaida  166 
melanippus   hegesippus,  Da- 
naida . .   176 
insularis,  Danaida  176 
melanoides,   Danaida   aglea     170 
melanolophus,  Gorsachius  256,  259 
melanope,  Motacilla  boarula  259 
melanosoma,  Hydrophis       10,  39 
nielissaseptentrionis, Danaida  172 
menetriesi   Euploea   deione     184 
Microhyla  berdmorei           .  .    281 
butleri                  .  .    281 
micropteruSjCuculus  254,  257,  260 
midamus  dejeani,  Euploea       189 
minor.   Halcyon   coromanda   216 
Malacocincla  sepiaria 

220,221 
miopus,   Rana  264,273 

modcsta  modesla,  Euploea       181 
monorhis,  Oceanodroma    .  .   253 


Index. — Zoology. 


Vll 


Page 
monticola,  Euploea  alcathoe  183 
Monticola    solitarius    philip- 

pinensis  .  .  260 
moorei  moorei,  Euploea  .  .  181 
Motacilla  boarula  nielanope  259 
mugimaki,  Poliomyias  254,  257 
niulciber  niulciber,  Euploea  18(5 
inultifasciata,  Mabuia  . .   269 

Muscitrea  grisola  grisola  .  .  257 
Mydaus  javanensis  .  .   236 

Myristicivora  bicolor  256,  259 
nasuta,  Megalophrys  .  .    282 

Natrix  chrysargus  .  .   265 

Nectophryne  picturata  .  .  198 
neglecta,  Lalage  finibriata  220 
neopliora,  Halcyon  coroinanda  216 
Nesolagus  netscheri  .  .    235 

netscberi,  Nesolagus  .  .   235 

nicobarica,  Caloenas  256,  259 
nigroalbus,  Typhlops  .  .   265 

nigrovittata,  Rana  .  .    274 

nigrovittatus  bcsuki,  Sciurus  231 
Ninox  scutulata  scutulata  254,  260 
niobc  vulcanus,  Lariscus  .  .  233 
nipalonsis,   Treron  253,  255 

nisicolor,  Hierococcyx  fugax 

254,  257 
notalus  taniansari,  Sciurus  230 
obscurus,  Turdus  254,  258 

oceauls,   Euploea  .  .    181 

Oceanodronia  nionorhis  .  .  253 
oiivaceuni,   Lygosonia  .  .    270 

omissa,    Kittacincla    nuilaba- 

rica  ..   211 

Oreocincla  dauma  255,  258 

orienfalis,  Acrocepbalus  .  .  255 
orientalis    oricntalis,    Eurys- 

tomus  254, 256 

ornatus  ornatus,  Cyrtostomus  259 

Otus  luciae  sianiensis  .  .   261 

scops   nialayana        254,  260 

oxycephalus,  Coluber  .  .    2()6 

Oxyglossus    laevis  .  .    271 

Pachylabra  conica  contracta  193 

gracilis  .  .    195 

perakensis  .  .    195 

stoliczkana  .  .    194 

turbinis  lacustus     193 


Page 

turbinis      subam- 
pullacea  ,  .    195 

winkleyi  ..    193 

pallidus,  Zanclostomus  java- 
nensis .  .   203 
palmeri.  Halcyon  chloris  214,  215 
panayensis  strigata,  Aplonis  259 

paradisi    incii,    Terpsiphone 

254,  257 
pardus,   Felis                          .  .  238 
parvirostris,         Cryptolopha 
trivirgata                             .  .  219 
Phylloscopus  trivir- 
gata                      .  .  219 
parvus,  Bufo                           .  .  282 
pavimentata,  Calaniaria      ^  .  267 
penangenis,  Bufo                  .  .  282 
perakana,  Ideopsis  daos     .  .  162 
perakensis,  Pachylabra        .  .  195 
Pericrocotus  cinereus       254,  258 
Petaurista     punctata     sunia- 

trana                                  230, 239 
Philautus  brevipes                 .  .  279 
castanonierus        .  .  280 
Philentoma  intcrniedius      .  .  218 
niaxwelli              .  .  218 
pyrrhoptera        .  .  218 
saravacensis       .  .  218 
velata  caesia       .  .  217 
philippinensis, Monticola  soli- 
tarius                                   .  .  260 
phoebus,  Euploea  corus      .  .  187 
phoenicotis,          Chalcoparia 

singalensis                           .  .  210 
phoenicura  chinensis,  Amau- 

rornis  253, 269 

Phrynella  pulchra                 .  .  282 

Phvlloscopus  borealis  borea- 

lis  258, 260 

inornatus  inornatus  258 

trivirgata    parviros- 
tris .  .    218 

piclurata,  Nectophryne  .  .  198 
Rana  264, 272 

pictus,   Dendrophis  .  .   266 

pileatus,  Anous  stolidus  .  .  260 
Halcyon  254, 257 

Pitta  eyanoptera  254,  257,  260 
granatina   vanheurni       212 

plalaniston,Danaidanielaneus  166 


Vlll 


Index. — Zoology.  . 


Page 
platurus,  Hydrus  5,  35 

plexippus  intensa,  Danaida  175 
plexippus,  Danaida  174 
plicatella,   Rana  .  .   272 

poliopsis,  Astur  badius  .  .  256 
Poliomyias  mugimaki  254,  257 
Polyodontophis  collaris  264,  265 
praemacaristus,  Danaida  lu- 

zonensis  .  .   169 

praetermissa,  Treron  bisincta  203 
prasinus,  Coluber  254,266 

prevostiana,  Gerardia  .  .   201 

Prionochilus  niaculatus  sep- 

lentrionalis  .  .   206 

Ptilonopus   jambu  253,  256 

Psamfnodynastes  pulverulen- 
tus  . .   267 

Pseudorhabdium  longiceps  267 
pulchra,  Phrynella  .  .   282 

pullus,  Rana  197,282 

pulverulcntus,       Psammody- 

nastes  .  .   267 

punctata    suniatrana,    Petau- 

rista  230, 239 

puniceus  continentis,Brachy- 

lophus  . .   204 

pyrrhoptera,  Philentonia     .  .   218 

Rallina   fasciata  .  .   253 

superciliaris         253, 256 

Rana  cataracta  264,  275 

chalconota  .  .   274 

doriae  .  .   271 

,  glandulosa  .  .   272 

hosii  .  .   274 

larutensis  .  .   277 

laticeps  .  .   271 

luctuosa  . .   273 

niacrodon  .  .   272 

niiopus  264, 273 

nigrovittata  .  .   274 

picturata  264,  272 

plicatella  .  .   272 

pullus  197, 282 

tasanae  . .   282 

Rattus  bukit  temmincki       .  .   233 

reinwardti,   Hestia  lynceus     160 

Rhacophorus  biniaculatus  .  .   278 

leucomystax        .  .   278 

Rhinoniyias    tardus  .  .   254 


Page 

rhodomelas,  Macropisthodon  265 

robinsoni,   Gonyocephalus        269 

Kalophrynus    264, 280 

rufif  rons  indochinensis,  Hori- 

zillas  .  .   205 

sacra,    Demiegretta  256,  259 

saravacensis,  Philentonia  .  .  218 
Sauropatis   chloris  .  .   214 

schicrbrandi,      Lalage      fim- 

briata  .  .   219 

Sciurus  nigrovittatus  besuki  231 
notatus  tamansari  230 
scolopacea  malayana,  Eudy- 

namis  257, 260 

scops  malayana,  Otus        254,  260 

scutulata  scutulata, Ninox  254,  260 

seiniundi,  Balionycteris  ma- 
culata  .  .    229 

sepiaria   barussana,   Malaco- 
cincla  .  .   205 

minor,    Malacocincla 

220,221 
sepiaria,    Malacocih- 
cla  220, 221 

septentrionis,    Danaida    me- 

lissa  ..    172 

septentrionalis,  Prionochilus 

maculatus  .  .   20(5 

sepulchralis,  Euploea  climena  181 

siamensis,     Hydrophis     tor- 

quatus  15, 43 

Otus  luciae  .  .   261 

sibirica  davisoni,  Cichloselys 

254,  258,  260 

fuliginosa,  Hemi- 

chelidon      212,254,257 

simillima    aelia,   Euploea    .  .    191 

sinensis,  Ardetta  .  .   254 

Sterna  . .   253 

singalensis    borneana,    Ghal- 

coparia  .  .   209 

interposita,  Chalcoparia  209 

koratensis,  Chalcoparia  208 

phoenicotis,Chalcop*aria210 

singalensis,  Chalcoparia  209 

suniatrana,  Chalcoparia  209 

singapura,  Euploea  aegyptus  189 

siniilis  vulgaris,  Danaida         164 

sita  ethologa,  Danaida         .  .    168 

sitah,  Danaida  juventa         .  .    165 

snelleni,  Euploea  erameri  .  .    180 


Index — Zoology. 


IX 


Page 
solitarius  philippinensis, 

Monticola  .  .   260 

soloensis,   Astur  256,260 

sondaica,  Felix  tigris  .  .    237 

Spizaetus  alboniger  .  .   211 

Sterna  aenetheta  .  .   253 

fluviatilis  tibetana  253,  260 
sinensis  . .   253 

sthenura,  Gallinago  . .   253 

stoliczkana,  Pachylabra  .  .  194 
stolidus  pileatus,  Anous  .  .  260 
strictus  chersonesus,  Chryso- 

colaptes  . .   217 

strigata,  Aplonis  panayensis  259 
striolata  umbrosa,  Thringor- 

hina  ..   212 

subampullacea,      Pachylabra 

turbinis  .  .    195 

subminuta,   Limonites  .  .   253 

Sula  siila  ..   254 

suniatrana,  Chalcoparia  singa- 

lensis  .  .   209 

Petauristapunctata229,  230 

sumatranus,  Trimeresurus       268 

superciliaris,  Rallina         253,  256 

Surniciilus   lugubris   siibsp.     257 

lugubris  dicruroides  254 

taniansari,   Sciurus   notatus     230 

tardus,   Rhinomyias  .  .    254 

tasanae,  Rana  .  .   282 

tentaculatuni,  Herpeton       .  .   201 

Terekia  cinerea  .  .   253 

Terpsiphone  atrocaudata  254,  260 

paradisi  incii  254,257 

Testiido  impressa  .  .   264 

thai,    Dicrurus    macrocercus 

207,  208 
Hvdrophis  caerulescens 

17,47 
Thalassophis  annandalei       29,  59 
anomalus  29, 58 

Thringorhina    striolata    um- 
brosa .  .   212 
libelana, Sterna  lluviatilis  253,  260 


Page 

tickelli    australis,   Drvmoca- 
taphus  '         . .   205 

tigris  sondaica,  Felis  .  .   237 

tityoides,  Danaida  .  .    168 

torquatus  torquatus,  Hvdrop- 
his ■  13, 41 

Treron       bisincta       praeter- 
missa  .  .    203 

nipalensis  253, 255 

tricolor,     Kittacincla     mala- 
barica  .  .   211 

tridactyla,  Ceyx  254,257 

Trimeresurus  gramineus     .  .   267 

sumatranus         268 

trivirgata,  Cryptolopha  ..218 

kinabaluense,  Crvp- 
tolopha  .  .    219 

parvirostris,     Crvp- 
lopha  '  .  .   219 

parvirostris       Phyl- 
loscopus  ..    219 

Tropidonotus  baramensis   ,  .    199 

turbinis   subampullacea,   Pa- 
chylabra .  .   195 

lacustris,  Pachylabra  193 

Turdus   obscurus  254,  258 

Typhlops   nigroalbus  .  .    265 

umbrosa,  Thringorhina  strio- 
lata .  .   212 

valakadyn,  Enhydrina  30,  60 

vanheurni,  Pitta  granatina  212 
Varanus  dumerilii  .  .    269 

velata  caesia,  Philentoma  217 
verma,  Lethe  .  .    283 

virgatus     gularis,     Accipiter 

254,  256,  260 
viperina,  Hydrophis  27,  56 

vittigerum,  Lygosoma  .  .   270 

volans,  Draco  .  .   268 

vulcanus,  Lariscus  niobe  .  .  233 
vulgaris,  Danaida  similis  .  .  164 
winkleyi,  Pachylabra  .  .    193 

xanthopygia,  Zanthopygia       254 
Zanclostomus  javanicus  pal- 
lidus  .  .    203 

Zanthopygia  xanthopygia   .  .   254 


Index. 


B.   BOTANY. 


Page 

Acanthus   ilicifolius  . .  106 

acarifera,  Thysanolaena  . .   125 

acrantha,  Litsea  . .  -152 

Acriopsis  indica  . .   119 

Acronychia  Porteri  . .     84 

acuminata,  Buchania  . .     87 
var.      fragilis, 

Peristrophe  . .  110 

acuminatissima,  Eugenia  . .     91 

acuminatum,  Elatostemma  . .   117 

acutangula,  Barringtonia  . .     91 

acutifolia,  Trichoglottis  . ."  118 

Adenia  grandiflora  . .  136 
adenophyllum,Heterophragma  104 

Adenostemma  viscosum  .  .     98 

Adinobotrys  atropurpureus  . .     89 

adnascens,  Niphobolus  . .   126 

Aeschynanthus  marmorata  . .    104 

affine,  Xanthophyllum  ..     82 

Aganosma  marginata  .  .   102 

Aglaia  odoratissima  . .     87 

tenuicaulis  . .     88 

Aglaonema  Helferi  . .  123 

albicans,  Litsea  . .   112 

albida,  Elytranthe  . .   114 

Albizzia  myriophylla  . .     90 

albomarginata,  Hornstedtia  . .   120 

Aleisanthia  rupestris  . .  249 

sylvatica  .  .   138 

Alocasia  denudata  . .  123 

Alpinia  pahangensis  .  .   154 
Alsodeia     Kunstleriana     var. 

latifolia  . .     82 

mollis  . .     82 

racemosa  .  .     82 

Alsophila  latebrosa  .  .   125 

Alyxia  lucida  . .   101 

Amacarpus  caudatus  .  .   143 

amboinensis,  Trema  .  .   116 
Amherstiana    var.    lanceolata, 

Ardisia  . .     99 

amoena,  Derris  . .     89 

Radermachera  . .   105 

Amoora  racemosa  . .     88 

Amomum  argyrophyllum  .  .   119 

aurantiacum  .  .   153 

cephalotes  . .   154 

molle  . .   120 

jcanthoglossum  . .   153 


Page 

Anacardium   occidentale        . .  87 

Anadendron  montanum         .  .  124 

anceps,  Dendrobium              . .  117 

Ancistrocladus  GrifTithii        . .  83 

andamanica,  Mapania             . .  124 

Aneilema  conspicuum            . .  122 

Angiopteris  evecta                 . .  126 

angustifolia,  Breynia              . .  114 

Ebermaiera       . .  105 

angustifolium,  Arthrophyllum  136 
Pseuderanthe- 

mum           . .  107 

Trema             . .  250 

Anodendron  C.andolleanum  .  .  102 

paniculatum      .  .  102 

Anplectruni  divaricatum       .  .  249 

Antheliacanthus  micranthus.  .  109 

Antidesma  velutinosum         ..115 

velutinum             . .  115 

Aporosa  aui'ea                         . .  115 

Planchoniana           .  .  115 

Prainiana                  . .  115 

sp.                              . .  115 

appendiculata      var.      Hamil- 

toniana,  Polybotrya            .  .  126 

arborea,  Callicarpa                . .  110 

Careya                       . .  91 

Maesa                        .  .  147 

Ardisia       Amherstiana       var. 

lanceolata                             .  .  99 

bractescens             .  .  99 

complanata             . .  99 

congesta                  . .  100 

creanata                  . .  99 

villosa                      . .  99 

Arecp  pumila                           .  .  122 

arenaria,  Waltheria                . .  130 

arenarium,  Jasminum            . .  147 

argentea,  Tournefortii           .  .  103 

Argostemma  hirsutum           .  .  139 

stipulacea          . .  139 

?  Argyreia  splendens             .  .  103 

argyrophyllum,  Amomum     ..  119 

Arthrophyllum   angustifolium  136 

congestum  . .  137 

Ascochilus  capricornis          ..  153 

asiatica,  Colubrina                 . .  86 

asiaticum,  Crinum                  , .  121 


Index. — Botany. 


XI 


Page 

Asplenium  circutarium 

.   126 

nitidum 

.   126 

anilaterale 

.   126 

atropurpureus,  Adinobotrys. 

.     89 

attenuata,  Uncaria 

.     93 

aurantiacum,  Amomum 

.  153 

aurea,  Aporosa 

.  115 

Dillenia 

.     80 

auricularia,  Dysophylla 

.   Ill 

auriculata,  Fagraea 

.  250 

Psychotria 

.     97 

Avicennia  lanata 

.  151 

officinalis 

.  151 

sphaerocarpa 

.   151 

Baccaurea  parviflora 

.  115 

sapida 

.  115 

Balanocarpus   ovalifolius 

.   130 

barbata,  Sonerila 

.  135 

barbellata,  Begonia 

.  135 

Baronietz,  Cibotium 

.  251 

Barringtonia  acutangula 

.     91 

pedicellata 

.   134 

Bauhinia  bracteata 

.     89 

begoniaefolia,    Pentaphragma     98 

Begonia  barbellata 

.  135 

bicolor,  var.  sepJentrionalis, 

Cyrtandra 

.   104 

biflora,   Wedelia 

.     98 

bimaculata,  Torenia 

.   149 

blechnoides,  Taenitis 

.   126 

Blumea  membranacea 

.     98 

myriocepbala 

.     98 

Boea  minutiflora 

.   148 

Boeckea  frutescens 

.  248 

Boehmeria  Klossii 

.   117 

Bonnaya  reptans 

.   104 

Botryophora  Kingii 

.   116 

bracteata,  Bauhinia 

.     89 

Otanthera 

.     92 

bractescens,  Ardisia 

.     99 

Eria 

.   118 

Breynia  angustifolia 

.   114 

microcalyx 

.   114 

reclinata 

.   114 

Bridelia  stipularis 

.   114 

Bromheadia  palustris 

.   118 

Brunoniana,  Gnetum 

.   125 

Buchania  acuminata 

.     87 

Calamus  myrianthus 

.   123 

Callicarpa   arborea 

.  110 

furfuracea 

.   150 

villosissima 

.   110 

Page 

Calycopteris  floribunda  . .  90 

campestris,  Nelsonia  . .  105 

Candida,  Ixora  . .  141 

Candolleanum,  Anadendron. .  102 

canina,  Pinanga  . .  122 

Canthium  depressinerve  . .  141 

trachystyle  . .  95 

capitata,  Myrioneuron  . .  93 

capitatimi,   Phyrnium  .  .  120 

Xanthophytum  . .  139 

capitellata,  Hedyotis  . .  93 

ScheflQera  . .  137 

capniocarpa,  Hodgsonia  . .  135 

Capparis  Klossii  . .  81 

larutensis  . .  247 

micrantha  . .  82 

paniculata  . .  129 

pubiflora  uar.  pera- 

kensis  . .  129 

capricornis,  Ascochilus  . .  153 

Carallia  euryoides  . .  248 

lucida  . .  9(J 

Carex  indica  . .  124 

mapanifolia  . .  124 

Gareya  arborea  . .  91 

Cassia  fistula  . .  89 

castanocarpus,    Chaetocarpus  116 


Castanopsis  tribuloides 
caudatus,  Amacarpus 
cephalotes,  Amomum 
Cerbera  odollam 
Ceriops  Roxburghiana 
Chaetocarpus   castanocarpus 
Chailletia  longipetala 
chartacea,  Ficus 
Chasalia  curviflora 
chinensis,  Desmos 
Chirita  parvula 
chlorostachya,  Lepidogathis 
Choriophyllum  malayanum 
Cibotium  Barometz 
ciliata,  Sonerila 
Cinnamomum  nitidum 
circutarium,  Asplenium 
citrifolia,  Morinda 
Clausenia  excavata 

hirta 
Clerodendron  infortunatum 

neriifolium 
coarctata,  Gluta 
coccinea,  Lumnitzera 
coeruleum,  Memecylon 


117 

143 

154 

101 

90 

116 

85 

116 

97 

80 

149 

107 

251 

251 

92 

111 

126 

96 

85 

85 

111 

111 

87 

90 

92 


xu 


Index. — Botany. 


Page 

Page 

CofTea   inciguensis 

.     96 

Delima  sarmenlosa 

80 

Cokienia  procumbens 

.   103 

Dendrobium  anceps 

117 

Colubrina    asiatica 

.     86 

Farmeri 

117 

(]ombretum  extensum 

.     90 

Pierardi 

117 

Klossii 

.     90 

secundum 

117 

Commelina  nudiilora 

.   122 

tortile 

117 

coniplanata,  Ardisia 

.     99 

DendrocoUa  trichoglottis 

119 

concinna,  .Vliliusa 

.   127 

densillora,  Holarrhena 

101 

Congea  tomentosa 

.   Ill 

Quisqualis 

90 

congesta,  Ardisia 

.   100 

Randia 

94 

Flemingia 

.     89 

denticulata,  Ipomoea 

103 

Ixora 

.     96 

denudata,  Alocasia 

123 

congestuni,   Arthrophyllura 

.   137 

depressinerve,  Canthium 

141 

Connarus   paniculatus 

.     88 

Derris  sp. 

89 

semidecandrus 

.     88 

amoena 

89 

Connaropsis  sericea 

.  131 

elliptica 

89 

conspicuum,  Aneilema 

.  122 

uliginosa 

89 

Cordia  subcordata 

.  103 

Desmos  chinensis 

80 

cordifolia,  Diplycosia 

.  145 

dichotoma,   Schizaea 

126 

coriacea,  Embelia 

.  249 

dichotomus,  Strophanthus    . 

102 

corticosum,  Meinecylon 

.     92 

Didymocarpus  primulinus 

250 

tCostus  speciosus  var.  argyr 

a- 

Didymoplexis  sp. 

119 

phyllus 

.   119 

diffusus,  Cyperus 

.  124 

Crataeva  macrocarpa 

.     82 

var.        pubisquama 

, 

crenata,  Ardisia 

.     99 

Cyperus 

.   124 

crenulatum,  Gynostemma 

.     93 

Dillenia  aurea 

80 

Pseuderanth( 

i- 

Dimeria  glabra 

.   156 

mum 

.  107 

Diospyros  flavicans 

.   100 

Crinum  asiaticum 

.    121 

siamensis 

.  100 

cristata,  Tacca 

.   121 

Diplazium  tomentosura 

.   126 

cristatum,  Limnanthemmn 

.   103 

Diplospora  minutitlora 

.  140 

Crotolaria  saltiana 

.     89 

stylosa 

.     94 

Croton   (irilfithii 

.   116 

Diplycosia  cordifolia 

.   145 

Crudia  Evansii 

.   133 

elliptica 

.   145 

culiciferum,  Taeniophyllum 

.   153 

erythrina 

.   146 

cuneiformis,  Orophea 

.     80 

microphylla 

.   145 

Curculigo  latifolia 

.   121 

Dipterocarpus   turbinatus 

.     83 

curviflora,  Chasalia 

. .     97 

Dischidia  ericaefolia 

.   146 

cuspidata,  Dracanea 

. .  155 

hirsuta 

.   102 

Cycas  siamcnsis  ? 

. .   125 

lancifolia 

.   102 

cymosus,  Melodinus 

. .   146 

viridiflora 

.   146 

Cyperus  difTusus 

.   124 

discolor,  Microtropis 

.     85 

dilFusus    var.    pubi 

s- 

disepalum,  Eriocaulon 

.   155 

quama 

.    124 

distans,  Licuala 

.123 

iiaspan 

.  .   124 

divaricatum,  Anplectrum 

.  249 

malaccensis 

.  .    124 

diversifolia,  Ixora 

.     95 

Cyrtandra    bicolor    var.    se 

P- 

var.       Kunstlen 

> 

tentrionalis 

.  .   104 

Ficus 

.   250 

Cyrtoccum  pilipcs 

.  .   125 

var.    0  V  o  id  e  a 

, 

Cystacanthus  pulcherrimus 

106 

Ficus 

.   250 

Daemonorops  Lewisianus 

.  .   123 

Dolichandrone  spathacea 

.  104 

decussatum,   Jasminnm 

. .  100 

Don  ax  grandis 

.   121 

Index. — Botany. 


xiu 


Dracaena  cuspidata 
siamensis 
dulcis,  Scoparia 
Dysophylla  auricidaria 
Ebermaiera  angustifolia 
lasiobotrys 
iiierguensis 
viscida 
eburneum,  Vaccinium 
edule,  Memecylon 
Elaeocarpus  Mastersii 

tectonaefolius 
data,   GlycDsmis 
Elatostemnia  acuminatum 

lineclatum    var 
major 
Elephantopus  scaber 
Ellipanthus   Heifer: 
elliptica,  Derris 

Diplycosia 

Morinda 
ellipticus,  Lasianthus 
Elytranthe  albida 

globosa 
Embelia  coriacea 
emblica,  Phyllanthus 
Eria  bractescens 
Eriachne  pallescens 
ericaefolia,  Dischidia 
Eriocaulon  disepalum 

glabriflorum 
Erioglossum  edule 
Ervatamia  subcapitata 
erythrina,  Diplycosia 
Erythropalum  scandens 
Eugenia  acuniinatissima 

Evansii 

formosa 

Graeme-Andersoniae 

jasminifolia 

laxiuscula 

leptantha 

punctifolia 

rubida 

zeylanica 
Eulalia  Milsumi 
Euonymus  javanicus 
euryoides,  Carallia 
Evansii,  Crudia 

Eugenia 

•Tasminum 


Page 

Page 

.   155 

evecta,   Angiopteris 

. .  126 

.  121 

Evodia  viticina 

.     84 

.   104 

exaltata,  Jussieua 

.     92 

.   Ill 

excavata,  Clausenia 

. .     85 

.  105 

excelsa,  Helicia 

. .   113 

.   105 

exoleta,  Utricularia 

.   104 

.   105 

extensum,  Combretum 

..     90 

.   105 

faginea,  Vatica 

. .     83 

.  249 

Fagraea  auriculata 

. .   250 

.     92 

racemosa 

.   103 

.   248 

Farmeri,  Dendrobium 

.   117 

.     81 

fasciculata,  Randia 

.     94 

.   130 

ferruginea,  Hippocratea 

.     86 

117 

Ficus  chartacea 

.   116 

diversifolia  uar.  Kuns 

t- 

..117 

leri 

.   250 

98 

diversifolia    imw.    ovo 

i- 

.     88 

dea 

.  250 

.     89 

gibbosa 

.  116 

145 

nitida 

.  250 

.     90 

fdipes,  Miliusa 

.     81 

98 

fistula,   Cassia 

.     89 

114 

Flagellaria  indica 

.  122 

113 

flavescens,  Lasianthus 

.     97 

249 

Saccolabium 

.   118 

114 

Salacia 

.     86 

118 

flavicans,  Diospyros 

.   100 

251 

Flemingia  congesta 

.     89 

146 

floribunda,  Calycopteris 

.     90 

155 

floribundus  aff.,  Mallotus 

.   116 

155 

Mallotus 

.   116 

87 

formosa,  Eugenia 

.     90 

101   ; 

'..  frondosus,  Phyllanthus 

.   114 

85  * 

frutescens,  Boeckea 

.    248 

85 

furfuracea,  Callicarpa 

.   150 

91 

Galearia  phlebocarpa 

.  115 

.  134 

Galeola  hydra 

.  119 

90 

Garcinia  sp. 

.     82 

134 

garcinioides,  Memecylon 

.     92 

.  133 

Salacia 

.     86 

133 

Gardenia  tubifera 

.     95 

91 

Gendarusa,  Justicia 

.   108 

91 

gibbosa,  Ficus 

.   116 

90 

glaberrima,  Lasianthus 

.     98 

91 

glabra,  Dimeria 

.  156 

251 

Pongamia 

.     89 

85 

Tarenna 

.   141 

248 

glabriflorum,  Eriocaulon 

.   155 

133 

glabrifolia,  Litsea 

.   152 

134 

Globba  pendula 

.   119 

148 

globosa,  Elytranthe 

.   113 

XIV 


Index. — Botany, 


Page 

Page 

Gluta  coarctata 

87 

Hornstedtia  albomarginata 

. .  120 

Tavoyana 

87 

rubrolutea 

. .  120 

Glycosmis  alata 

130 

Hoya  parasitica 

. .  102 

Gnetum  Brunoniana 

125 

hyalina,  Lepidagathis 

. .  107 

scandens 

125 

hydra,  Galeola 

. .  119 

Goniothalanius  undulatus 

81 

hypogyna,  Peliosanthes 

. .   121 

Graeme-Andersoniae,  Eugenia  134 

Hypolytruni   latifolium 

. .   124 

grande  var.  Merguica,  Meme 

Iguanura  Wallichiana 

. .   123 

cylon 

92 

ilicifolius,  Acanthus 

.  .   106 

grandiflora,  Adenia 

136 

Illigera  trifoliata 

..   113 

Iporaoea 

103 

indica,  Acriopsis 

. .  119 

Salacia 

86 

Carex 

.   124 

grandillorus,  Pachynocarpus 

127 

Flagellaria 

. .   122 

grandis,  Donax 

121 

Maesa 

. .     99 

Ochna 

85 

Pluchea 

. .     98 

Greenia  Jackii 

93 

infortunatum,  Clerodendror 

I     111 

Griffithii,  Ancistrocladus 

83 

integrifolia,  Maesa 

.     98 

Croton 

116 

Premna 

. .  Ill 

Prismatomeris 

96 

intermedia,  Rourea 

.     88 

Guettarda  speciosa 

95 

Ipomoea  denticulata 

. .  103 

Gymnopteris  subrepanda 

126 

grandiflora 

.  103 

Gymnostachyum  trilobum     . 

106 

Ixora  Candida 

.  141 

Gynostenima  crenulatum 
haspan,  Cyperus 

93 
124 

congesta 
diversifolia 

.  96 
.     95 

Hedyotis  capitellata 
pachycarpa 
Helferi,  Aglaonema 

93 
140 
123 

merguensis 
nigricans 

.  95 
.     96 

Ellipanthus 
Helicia  excelsa 

88 
113 

opaca 
pumila 

.  96 
.  142 

.     terminalis 

113 

spectabilis 

.     95 

Helicteres  hirsuta 

84 

stricta 

.     95 

Heptapleuruni  venulosum     . . 

93 

Jackianus,  Strophanthus 

.  102 

Hernandia  peltata 

113 

Jackii,  Greenia 

.     93 

Heterophragma  adenophyllum  104 

Psychotria 

.     97 

Hibiscus  niacrophyllus 

83 

jasminifolia,  Eugenia 

.  133 

tiliaceus 

83 

Jasminum  arenarium 

.  147 

Hippocratea  ferruginea 

86 

decussatimi 

.  100 

hirsuta,  Dischidia 

102 

Evansii 

.  148 

Helicteres 

84 

puberulum 

.  100 

Randia 

140 

syringaefoliimi 

.   100 

hirsutum,  Argostemma 

139 

javanica  var.  major,  Pelliom 

la  116 

hirta,  Clausenia 

85 

Vernonia 

.  145 

Lepisanthes 

132 

javanicus,  Euonymus 

.     85 

hirtella,  Vigna 

132 

Jussieua  exaltata 

.     92 

hirtellum,  Zanthoxylum 

131 

Justicia  Gendarusa 

.  108 

hispidula,   Ophirrohiza 

93 

ovalis 

.  150 

Hodgsonia  capniocarpa 

135 

purpurascens 

.   107 

Holarrhena  densiflora 

101 

quadrifaria 

.   108 

pauciflora 

101 

subcoriacea 

.  108 

Homonoia  riparia 

116 

valida 

.   108 

Hooker! anum,  Pygeum 

248 

viridiflora 

.  108 

Hookeri,  Vitis 

86 

Kadsura  Roxburghiana 

.     81 

Index. — Botany. 


XV 


Page 

Kingii,  Botryophora  . .   116 

Xanthophyllum  . .     82 

Klossii,  Boehmeria  . .   117 

Capparis  . .     81 

Gombretum  . .     90 

Phyllanthus  . .   114 

Schefflera  ..  137 

Randia  . .     94 

Kraensis,  Piper  . .  112 

Kunstleriana      var.     latifolia, 

Alsodeia  .  .     82 

Kurzii,   Lasianthus  . .   143 

Kyllinga  monocephala  . .   124 

Labisia  pothoina  . .     99 

laevis,  Scleria  . .   124 

Sterculia  . .     84 

lanata,  Avicennia  .  .   151 

lanceolata,  SchefTlera  .  .   137 

lancifolia,  Dischidia  .  .   102 
lancifolius  inir.  laxior,  Strobi- 

lanthes  .  .   lO.i 

lanuginosa,  Lindsaya  .  .   126 

Laportea  stimulans  . .  116 

larutensis,  Capparis  . .   247 

Lasianthus  eliipticus  .  .     98 

flavescens  .  .     97 

glaberrima  .  .     98 

Kurzii  .  .   143 

mollis  .  .    144 

velutinus  .  .   144 

lasiobotrys,  Ebermaiera  . .   105 

lasiocephala,  Psvchotria  ?  .  .     97 

Lastroea  Robinsonii  . .  156 

latebrosa,  Alsophila  . .   125 

latifolia,  Curculigo  . .   121 

Salacia  .  .     86 

latifolium,  Hypolytrum  .  .   124 

laurifolia,  Thunbergia  . .  105 

laxiuscula,  Eugenia  . .  133 

Leda  roseo-punctata  . .   109 

rubrolutea  . .   149 

Lepidagathis  chlorostachys  .  .   107 

hyalina  . .   107 

parviflora  . .   107 

Lepisanthes  hirta  .  .   132 

leptantha,  Eugenia  . .     91 

Lettsomia  peguensis  .  .   103 

leucophylla       var.      latifolia, 

Smilax  . .   121 

Lewisianus,  Daemonorops  . .   123 

Licuala   distans  . .   123 

Linuianthemuni  cristatum  . .   103 


Pa^e 

Lindsaya  lanuginosa  . .  126 
lineolatuin  var.  major,  Elatos- 

temma  . .  117 

Litsea  acrantha  . .   152 

albicans  . .   112 

glabrifolia  . .  152 

panamonja  . .   112 

lobata,  Urena  . .     83 

longiflorum.  Rhododendron . .   249 

longifolia,  Myristica  .  .   113 

longifolius,  Trigostemon  ..   115 

longipetala,  Chailletia  . .     85 

Lorj^nthus  pentandrus  .  .   113 

vulpinus  .  .   113 

lucescens,  Podochilus  . .   119 

lucida,   Alyxia  . .   101 

Carallia  . .     90 

Lunmitzera  coccinea  . .     90 

lycioides,  Rhabdia  . .   103 

Lygodiuni  polystachyum  . .   126 

Maba  merguensis  . .   100 

macrantha,  Vallaris  . .   101 

niacrocarpa,  Crataeva  . .     82 

Nenga  . .   123 

macrophyllus,  Hibiscus  . .     83 

madagascariensis    Neyraudia     125 

Maesa   arborea  . .   147 

indica  . .     99 

integrifolia  . .     98 

ovocarpa  . .  147 

paniculata  . .     99 

ramentacea  . .     98 

striata  var.  dissitiflora  147 

malaccense,  Pseuderanthemum  107 

malaccensis,  Cyperus  .  .   124 

malayana,  Prismatomeris  96, 142 

malayanum,    Choriophyllum     251 

Mallotus  aff.   floribundus  .  .    116 

floribundus  . .   116 

Mapania  andamanica  . .   124 

mapanifolia,  Carex  . .   124 

marginata,  A'anosma  .  .    102 

Mariscus   microcephalus  . .   124 

marmorata,  Aeschynanthus  . .   104 

martabanica,  Turpinia  . .     87 

Mastersii,  Elaeocarpus  . .  248 

Melastoma  normale  . .     92 

Melodinus  cymosus  .  .   146 

Melodorum  rubiginosum  . .     80 

membranacea,  Bluniea  .  .     98 

Memecylon  coernleum  . .     92 

corticosum  . .     92 


XVI 


Index. — Botany. 


Page 

Page 

Memecylon  edule 

.     92 

nudiflora,   Commelina 

122 

garcinioides 

.     92 

occidentale,  Anacardium 

87 

grande   var.  Me 

r- 

Ochna  grandis 

85 

guica 

.     92 

ochraceum,  Saccolabium 

118 

merguensis,  CofTea 

.     96 

odollam,  Cerbera 

101 

Ebennaiera 

.  105 

odoratissima,  Aglaia 

87 

Ixora 

.     95 

oenoplia  var.  ornata,  Zizyphus    86 

Maba 

.  100 

officinalis,  Avicennia 

151 

Merremia  umbellata 

.   104 

Olea  penangiana 

148 

micrantha,  Cai)paris 

.     82 

opaca,  Ixora 

96 

micranthus,  Antheliacanthu! 

5     109 

Ophiorrhiza  hispidula 

93 

microcalyx,  Breynia 

.  114 

remotiflora 

140 

iTiicrocephalus,  Marisciis 

.  124 

Oreorhaninus  serrulatus 

132 

Microlepia  Speluncae 

.   126 

Orophea  cuneiformis 

80 

Micromelum  pnbescens 

.     84 

Otanthera  bracteata 

92 

microphylla,  Diplycosia 

.   145 

ovalifolius,  Balanocarpus 

130 

microstylis,  Sphenodesma 

.   Ill 

ovalis,  .lusticia 

150 

Microtropis  discolor 

.     85 

ovocarpa,  Maesa 

147 

Miliusa  concinna 

.  127 

pachycarpa,  Hedyotis 

140 

fllipes 

.     81 

Pachynocarpus  grandiflorus. . 

127 

Milsumi,   Eulalia 

.   251 

Wallichii 

83 

minutiflora,  Boea 

.   148 

pahangensis,  Alpinia 

154 

Diplospora 

.   140 

Pajanelia  multijuga 

105 

molle,  Atnonnim 

.   120 

pallescens,   Eriachne 

251 

mollis,  Alsodeia 

.     82 

palmatifida,  Tacca 

121 

Lasianthns 

.  144 

palustris.  Bromheadia 

118 

monocephala,   Kyllinga 

.   124 

panamonja,  Litsea 

112 

monoicum,  Viscum 

.   114 

paniculata,  Capparis 

129 

montanum,  Anadendron 

.   124 

Maesa 

99 

monticola,  Peliosanthes 

.   155 

paniculatum,  Anodendron 

102 

Morinda  citrifolia 

.     96 

paniculatus,  Connarus 

88 

elliptica 

.     96 

parasitica,  Hoya 

102 

multijuga,  Pajanclia 

.  105 

parviflora,  Baccaurea 

115 

Mussaenda  variolosa 

.     93 

Lepidagathis 

107 

niyrianthus,  Calamus 

.   123 

var         pectinata, 

myriocephala,  Blumea 

.     98 

Bungia 

110 

Myrionenron  capitata 

.     93 

parvula,  Chirita 

149 

myriophylla,  Albizzia 

.     90 

Bandia 

94 

Myristica  longifolia 

.   113 

pauciflora,  Holarrhena 

101 

Nelsonia  campestris 

.   105 

pedicellata,  Barringtonia 

134 

Nenga  macrocarpa 

.   123 

peduncularis,  Timonius 

142 

neriifolium,  Clerodendron 

.   Ill 

peguensis,  Lettsomia 

103 

nervosum,  Sandoricum 

.     87 

Peliosanthes  hypogyna 

121 

Neyraudia   mada,t.'ascariensi! 

5     125 

monticola 

155 

nigrescens,  Pleopeltis 

.   126 

Pellionia  javanica  var.  major 

116 

nigricans,  Ixbra 

.     96 

peltata,  Hernandia 

113 

Niphobolus  adnascens 

.   126 

penangiana,  Olea 

148 

nitida,  Ficus 

.   250 

Ternstroemia     . . 

83 

nitidum,  Asplenium 

.   126 

pendula,  Globba 

119 

Cinnamomum 

.   Ill 

pentandra,   Sphenodesma 

111 

normale,  Melastoma 

.     92 

pentandrus,  Loranthus 

113 

Noronhae,   Schima 

.     83 

Pentaphragma  begoniaefolia 

98 

Index. — Botany. 


xvii 


Page 

perakensis,  Rauwolfia 

101 

Strophanthus 

102 

Peristrophe    acuminata     var 

fragilis 

110 

phlebocarpa,  Galearia 

115 

Phoebe  Tavoyana 

112 

Phyllanthus  emblica 

114 

frondosus 

114 

Klossii 

114 

Phyrnium  capitatum 

120 

Pierardi,  Dendrobium 

117 

pilipes,  Cyrtoccum 

12.5 

Pinanga  canina 

122 

Piper  Kraensis 

112 

polycarpa 

112 

pupuloides 

111 

Planchoniana,  Aporosa 

115 

Pleopeltis  nigrescens 

126 

sinuosa 

126 

Pluchea  indica 

98 

Podochilus  lucescens 

119 

Pollia  sorzogonensis 

122 

Polybotrya  appendiculata  var 

Hamiltoniana 

126 

polycarpa,  Piper 

112 

polystachyum,  Lygodium 

120 

Pongamia  glabra 

89 

popiilnea,  Thespesia 

83 

Porteri,  Acronychia 

84 

polhoina,  Labisia 

99 

Pothos  scandens 

124 

Prainiana,  Aporosa 

115 

Premna  integrifolia 

111 

primulinus,  Didymocarpus  . . 

250 

Prismatonieris  Griffithii 

96 

malayana      96 

,142 

procumbens,  Coldenia 

103 

prostrata,  Sonerila 

249 

Pseuderanthemum    angustifo- 

lium    . . 

107 

crenula- 

tum     . . 

107 

m  a  1  a  c  - 

cense. . 

107 

Psychotria  auriculata 

97 

Jackii 

97 

lasiocephala 

97 

sarmentosa 

97 

vulpina 

142 

Pteris  quadriaurita 

126 

puberulum,  Jasminum 

100 

Page 

pubescens,  Micromelum  . .     84 

Vitex  ..  Ill 
pubiflora      var.      perakensis, 

Capparis  . .   129 

pulcherrimus,  Cystacanthus . .  106 

pumila,  Areca  . .  122 

Ixora  . .  142 

punctifolia,  Eugenia  . .     91 

pupuloides,  Piper  . .  Ill 

purpurascens,  Justicia  . .  107 

Pygeum  Hookerianum  . .  248 

quadriaurita,  Pteris  . .   126 

quadrifaria,  Justicia  . .   108 

Quisqualis  densiflora  . .     90 

racemosa,  Alsodeia  . .     82 

Amoora  . .     88 

Fagraea  . .  103 

Radermachera  amoena  . .  105 

ramentacea,  Maesa  . .     98 

Randia  densiflora  . .     94 

fasciculata  . .     94 

hirsuta  . .  140 

Klossi  . .     94 

parvula  . .     94 

Rauwolfia  perakensis  . .  101 

reclinata,  Rreynia  . .  114 

remotiflora,  Ophiorrhiza  . .  140 

Rennellia  speciosa  . .     96 

reptans,  Bonnaya  . .  104 

retusa,  Vigna  . .     89 

Rhabdia  lycioides  . .   103 

Rhododendron  longiflorum  . .   249 

Rhodoleia  Teysmannii  . .  248 

rhombifolia,  Sida  . .     83 

riparia,  Homonoia  . .  116 

Robinsonii,  Lastroea  . .  156 

Vitis  . .     87 

roseo-punctata,  Leda  . .  109 

Rourea  intermedia  . .     88 

Roxburghiana,  Ceriops  . .     90 

Kadsura  . .     81 

rubida,  Eugenia  . .     90 

rubiginosa  var.  ensifolia,  Ster- 

culia  . .     84 

rubiginosum,  Melodorum  . .     80 

rubrolutea,  Hornstedtia  . .  120 

Leda  ..  149 

Rungia  parviflora  var.  pecti- 

nata  ..  110 

rupestris,  Aleisanthia  . .  249 

rupicola,  Vernonia  . .  144 


XVlll 


Index. — Botany. 


Page 

Saccolabium  flavescens 

.  118 

ochraceum 

.  118 

Salacia  flavescens 

.     86 

garcinioides 

.     86 

grandiflora 

.     86 

latifolia 

.     86 

verrucosa 

.     86 

vinimea 

.     86 

Saltiana,  Crotolaria 

.     89 

Sandoricum  nervosum 

.     87 

sapida,  Baccaurea 

.  115 

sarmentosa,  Delima 

.     80 

Psychotria 

.     97 

scaber,  Elephantopus 

.     98 

scandens,  Erythropalum 

.     85 

Gnetum 

.  125 

Pothos 

.  124 

Schefflera  capitellata 

.  137 

Klossii 

.  137 

lanceolata 

.  137 

Schima  Noronhae 

.     83 

Schizaea  dichotoma 

.  126 

Scleria  laevis 

.  124 

Scoparia  dulcis 

.  104 

secundum,  Dendrobium 

.   117 

semidecandrus,  Connarus 

.     8S 

sericea,  Connaropsis 

.  131 

serrulatus,   Oreorhamnus 

.   132 

siamensis  ?,  Cycas 

.   125 

siamensis,  Diospyros 

.  100 

Dracaena 

.  121 

Sida  rhombifolia 

.     83 

sinuosa,  Pleopeltis 

.   126 

Smilax  leucophylla  var.  lat 

i- 

folia 

.   121 

Solanum  torvum 

.  104 

Sonerila  barbata 

.   135 

ciliata 

..     92 

prostrata 

. .  249 

Sophora  tomentosa 

..     89 

sorbifolra,  Stenochlaena 

..  126 

sorzogonensis,  Pollia 

. .  122 

spathacea,  Dolichandrone 

. .  104 

speciosa,  Guettarda 

..     95 

Rennellia 

..     96 

speciosus  var.  argyrophyllu 

s, 

Costus 

. .   119 

spectabilis, .  Ixora 

..     95 

Speluncae,  Microlepia 

. .  126 

sphaerocarpa,  Avicennia 

. .  151 

Sphenodesma  microstylis 

. .  Ill 

pentandra 

. .  Ill 

Page 
Sphintacanthus  tabacif olius . .  110 
?  splendens,  Argyreia  . .  103 

Stenochlaena  sorbifolia        . .   126 
Sterculia  laevis  ..     84 

rubiginosa  var.  en- 
sifolia  . .     84 

stimulans,  Laportea  . .  116 

stipulacea,  Argostemma        . .  139 
stipularis,  Bridelia  . .  114 

striata  var.  dissitiflora,  Maesa  147 
stricta,  Ixora  . .     95 

Strobilanthes  lancifolius  var. 

laxior  . .  105 

subcapitatus    , .  106 

violascens       . .  106 

Strophanthus  dichotomus     . ,  102 

Jackianus        . .  102 

perakensis      . .  102 

Wallichii         ..  102 

stylosa,  Diplospora  . .     94 

subcapitata,  Ervatamia  . .  101 

subcapitatus,  Strobilanthes  . .  106 

subcordata,  Cordia  . .  103 

subcoriacea,  Justicia  . .  108 

subrepanda,  Gymnopteris      . .   126 

sylvatica,  Aleisanthia  . .  138 

syringaefolium,  Jasminum    . .  100 

tabacif  olius,    Sphinctacanthus  110 

Tacca  cristata  . .  121 

palmatifida  . .  121 

Taeniophyllum  cuTiciferum  . .   153 

Taenitis  blechnoides  . .  126 

Tarenna  glabra  . .  141 

Tavoyana,  Gluta  ..     87 

Phoebe  ..  112 

tectonaefolius,  Elaeocarpus  . .     84 

tenuicaulis,   Aglaia  . .     88 

teres,  Vanda  . .  118 

terminalis,  Helicia  . .  113 

Ternstroemifl  penangiana     . .     83 

Teysmanii,  Rhodoleia  . .  248 

Thecostele  Zollinger!  . .  118 

Thespesia  populnea  . .     83 

?  Thottea  tricornis  . .  Ill 

Thunbergia  laurifolia  ..  105 

Thysolaena  acarifera  . .  125 

tiliaceus.  Hibiscus  . .     83 

Timonius  peduncularis  . .   142 

tomentosa,  Congea  . .  Ill 

Sophora  . .     89 

tomentosum,  Diplazium         . .  126 

Torenia  bimaculata  . .  149 


Index. — Botany. 


XIX 


Page 

tortile,  Dendrobium 

..  117 

torvum,  Solanum 

. .  104 

Tournefortia  argentea 

. .  103 

trachystyle,  Canthium 

..     95 

Trema  amboinensis 

..  116 

angustifolium 

..  250 

tribuloides,  Castanopsis 

..  117 

Trichoglottis  acutifolia 

. .  118 

trichoglottis,  Dendrocolla 

. .  119 

Trichomanes  javanica 

..  126 

?  tricornis,  Thottea 

.  Ill 

trifoliata,  Illigera 

.  113 

Trigostemon  longifolius 

.  115 

trilobum,  Gymnostachyum 

.  106 

tuberosa,  Xyris 

.   122 

tubifera,  Gardenia 

.     95 

turbinatus,  Dipterocarpus 

.     83 

Turpinia  martabanica 

.     87 

uliginosa,  Derris 

.     89 

iimbellata,  Merremia 

.  104 

Uncaria   attenuata 

.     93 

undulatus,  Goniothalamus 

.     81 

unilaterale,  Asplenium 

.   126 

Urena  lobata 

.     83 

Utricularia   exoleta 

.  101 

Vaccinium  eburneum 

.  249 

valida,  Justicia 

.   108 

Vallaris  macrantha 

.  101 

Vanda  teres 

.  118 

variolosa,  Mussaenda 

.     93 

Vatica  faginea 

.     83 

vclutinosum,  Antidesma 

.  115 

velutinum,  Antidesma 

.  115 

velutinus,  Lasianthus 

.   144 

venulosum,  Heptapleiirum 

.     93 

Vernonia  javanica 

.  145 

rupicola 

.  144 

Page 

Vernonia  Wallichii 

..145 

verrucosa,  Salacia 

.     86 

Vigna  hirtella 

.  132 

retusa 

.     89 

villosa,  Ardisia 

.     99 

villosissima,  Callicarpa 

.  110 

vinimea,  Salacia 

.     86 

violascens,  Strobilanthes 

.   106 

viridiflora,  Dischidia 

.   146 

Justicia 

.  108 

viscida,  Ebermaiera 

.  105 

viscosum,  Adenostemma 

.     98 

Viscum  monoicum 

.  114 

Vitex  pubescens 

.  Ill 

viticina,  Evodia 

.     84 

Vitis  Hookeri 

.     86 

Robinsonii 

.     87 

vulpina,  Psychotria 

.  142 

vulpinus,  Loranthus 

.  113 

Wallichiana,  Iguanura 

.  123 

Zalacca 

.  123 

Wallichii,  Pachynocarpus 

.     83 

Strophanthus 

.  102 

Vernonia 

.  145 

Waltheria   arenaria 

.  130 

Wedelia  biflora 

.     98 

xanthoglossum,  Amomum 

.  153 

Xanthophyllum   afline 

.     82 

Kingii 

.     82 

Xanthophytum    capitatum 

.  139 

Xyris  tuberosa 

.  122 

Zalacca  Wallichiana 

.  123 

Zanthoxylum    hirtellum 

.  131 

zeylanica,  Eugenia 

.     91 

Zizyphus  oenoplia  var.  orna 

ta    86 

Zollingeri,  Thecostele 

.   118 

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H 
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H 

cd 


O 

Ph  CO  S 


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